Look for a used
midi K.I.T.I PRO by
KAT.
It allows 9 trigger inputs + 1 Hi-hat foot controller.
I have 4 of them. No sounds, it is strictly a 9 Trigger to MIDI interface so you are using internal sounds.
- MIDIkiti Pro by KAT
- MIDI-kiti_pro.jpg (224.24 KiB) Viewed 1293 times
Being a drummer, I have all sorts of this stuff:
Ddrum2
ddrum4
Yamaha TMX (Yamaha's version of the Alesis D4.)
I trigger my drums live, so for me using a MIDI kit for recording made perfect sense. Most drummers are "MIDiots" - they know nothing about MIDI and are totally afraid of Electronics. Half of the keyboard players I know don't even venture into the land of MIDI. These guys are totally missing out on all the things they could be doing.
Before this thing is all over, I intend to be controlling a lighting rig from my drums via MIDI as well.
MIDI RULES!!!
I wanted a keys player for my band, but couldn't find one, so I'm programming everything, and since I am putting the band together, and own most of the gear, I am going to pay myself double for being the drummer AND the keyboard player.
The guitarist is going to use a set of "Moog Pedals" that I'm building, so he might get something extra for his footwork. LOL
But the "midi K.I.T.I. - PRO" is ideal. In fact, what I would do is use the Kat for the drums, and remap whatever unit you already have for the cymbals. Or the other way around, but I suspect the Kat is a better interface.
You can get them on E-bay regularly for around $50-$100.
Pop two of them together and you've got 18 trigger inputs, with a pair of high-hat inputs, and you can use a Y cable to connect a hi-hat foot controller to both units so you control opening/closing both sets of hi-hats at once.
Somebody told me the original "midi K.I.T.I." can be modified to add the footpedal Jack (which is what KAT did.) But I'd rather just buy the "Midi K.I.T.I. Pro" versions to begin with.