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The Best Electronic Drum Sets – You Need to Hear These!

The Best Electronic Drum Sets – You Need to Hear These!

Once you decide it’s time to buy an electronic drum kit, there are key factors to consider that are important to all drummers, such as:

  • Playability
  • Type of head and pad feel (mesh, rubber)
  • Configuration (how many pads, how many zones)
  • Module flexibility
  • Included kits
  • Ability to load in samples
  • Number of trigger inputs and audio outputs
  • Ability to edit sounds (adding effects or DSP)

While the playing feel is important, a critical consideration when purchasing an electronic drum kit is, “How does it sound?” What you really want to do is sit down and listen to the drum module, right? Well, that’s what we did. We took drum loops and fed the MIDI to each module then scrolled through all the presets looking for the best and coolest sounds.

If you don’t understand the basics of electronic drums, then check out this article: “Choose the Best Electronic Drum Set for You.”

Our Top-of-the-line Electronic Drum Choices

We considered all the electronic drum kits we carry and decided to listen to these three.

Roland V-Drums TD-50KV2

Using the Roland TD-50X sound module, this premium kit includes:

  • 70 premium kits
  • 900 instrument sounds
  • 8-sensor PD-140DS snare and 5-sensor CY-18DR ride cymbal
  • 38 onboard effects assignable to individual drums and cymbals
  • 16 trigger inputs
  • 8 + 2 + 2 outputs (direct + 1/4-inch main + XLR main)

Yamaha DTX10K-XRW

The DTX-PROX module is the centerpiece of this amazing kit that features:

  • 40 studio-captured kits
  • 400 custom user kits
  • Textured Cellular Silicon dual-zone drum pads
  • 3-zone cymbal design
  • 11 trigger inputs
  • 2 outputs (main out)

Alesis Strike Pro

The Strike Pro module is the sonic heart of this awesome kit that comes with:

  • 136 kits
  • 1,800 drum/percussion instruments
  • 45,000 sample sounds
  • Dual-zone mesh-head snare and toms plus cymbals and 3-zone ride cymbal
  • 12 trigger inputs
  • 8 + 2 outputs (direct + main)

Let’s Listen

Nick D’Virgilio, Sweetwater content specialist and drummer in residence, programmed rock and jazz grooves so we could hear what these modules sound like. We sent the same MIDI data to each module so you can compare how they sound. The results are fascinating — hearing the differences between the kits. We couldn’t compare hundreds of kits, but we picked some of our favorites — some that we thought sounded great and others that seemed unique. Let’s listen.

Roland – Rock Groove

Yamaha – Rock Groove

Alesis – Rock Groove

Roland – Jazz Groove

Yamaha – Jazz Groove

Alesis – Jazz Groove

What Do You Think?

We loved listening to the variety of all the kits, seeing which ones sounded the best and inspired ideas for patterns or songs. Which kit sparked ideas for you?

Hopefully these samples helped you decide which kit is the right fit for you. Give your Sweetwater Sales Engineer a call at (800) 222-4700 and order your electronic drum kit today.

About Lynn Fuston

Before his 10-year tenure at Sweetwater (2015-2026), Lynn Fuston spent 37 years behind recording consoles in dozens of studios in Nashville, as well as doing remote recordings around the globe. He's been a contributing writer/editor for magazines such as EQ, ProSound News, Audio Media and Pro Audio Review since the '90s. His studio work on Gold and Platinum-selling records with iconic Christian artists such as Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith, DC Talk, Russ Taff, Twila Paris, Kathy Troccoli, and countless others gave him a unique perspective on the artistry and technology of recording. He also produced the world-renowned 3D Audio CDs, which allowed listeners to compare mics, preamps, analog-to-digital converters, DAWs, and summing, enabling listeners to hear the differences in their own studio. At Sweetwater he conducted over 30 shootouts. Until his retirement in 2026, Fuston was the Manager of Written Content for Sweetwater's inSync articles.
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