I finally got a chance to set up Superior Drummer with Reaper. It's relatively easy and the samples are incredible. What I really like most about it so far is that you can record your MIDI in Reaper (or whatever DAW), and set the outputs from SD3 to map with tracks in Reaper. It only outputs the sound, doesn't record audio to track (unless you want to). You can add whatever plugins you want to your Reaper tracks and send htem all to a drum buss, and then render your song. Which means you can keep your MIDI available to modify, while being able to process your audio however you'd like in your DAW. Of course, you can do all of this strait in SD3 as a standalone app, too.
The routing options are pretty amazing. There's so many options, it was hard to decide what was going ot work for me. Considering that you don't need to print the audio in order to process it in the DAW, it feels right (for me anyway) to blend the mic channels and output as single tracks: For example, the three mics for the kick; the top and bottom snare mics; the condenser and dynamic overhead mics; the three ambient mic positions. You can blend the levels as you'd like in the plugin into a single stereo track in the DAW, which seems reasonable to go back to and adjust to taste.
Setting this up is super easy. In SD3, you can click a button and it sets up the audio routing from mic tracks to output tracks. You can decide to customize that if you'd like. From Reaper, you can just click a button and it automatically sets up the routing from SD3 to your audio tracks. There's only 16 stereo tracks to work with max from SD3, but that almost feels like too many. And if you're Neil Pert's ghost, you can get creative if that isn't enough for you by bussing things creatively, just like with any console.
There seems to be a lot of flexibility to make a workflow that works for you. And that's just the beginning of it. The bleed control is really interesting. I have several studios, which include more than enough drum kits and different mic options. I'm looking forward to using this more.
After mixing tracks recorded in a real studio, I kinda wish we did it with SD3. I feel like there's a hell of a lot more control, especially with bleed, where you don't need to worry about gates, and also you can fix flubs much easier.
Re: Virtual Home Studio Setups
101
Last edited by cakes on Tue Oct 07, 2025 9:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.