🎵 Beat the Ordinary with Yamaha's DD75!
The Yamaha DD75 Portable Digital Drums is a versatile drumming solution featuring 8 touch-sensitive pads, 570 drum voices, and MIDI connectivity. Weighing just 9 pounds, it’s designed for musicians on the go, allowing you to connect to various music devices and create your own unique sound with customizable kits.
Item weight | 9 Pounds |
Connector type | Auxiliary |
Included components | Drumsticks |
Manufacturer | Yamaha PAC |
Item Weight | 4.08 Kilograms |
Product Dimensions | 60.45 x 17.78 x 41.15 cm; 4.08 kg |
Item model number | DD75 |
Color Name | Black |
Material Type | Plastic |
U**S
Funciona a la perfección
Funciona muy bien, una solución para no comprar tantos instrumentos
D**K
Pads feel like Bongo pads, I love it
I also purchased the Yamaha snare drum stand. Good choice, expensive, but I think well worth it. What I wished I had read in the reviews was an affirmative statement that the drum tripod was a perfect fit, it's AFFIRMATIVE. I don't have room for even an electronic drum kit, but this is perfect for my small music room. The sound is pretty good and the volume is good enough. The foot pedals are as some of the reviews I read, well for the base drum I kind of have to stomp on it, I did not want to pay an extra eighty bucks for a more realistic foot pedal. I just received this, so what I'm feeling so far is overall this is going to be a lot of fun. I've been having pretty good luck with my Amazon purchases that past four or five years, but I rely heavy on fellow shopper's for reviews. I hope this one helps somebody.
K**R
Product is good
Sound awesome and great, I practice and play with it with no issue at all. Great Product of Yamaha.
J**H
Great Tabletop Drum Set For One Handed Drumming
I bought this drum set because I lost use of my left arm due to a stroke. It’s perfect for someone as myself. I love the built in songs, do wish they had a few more but it’s enough to play with. The heads are great perfect amount of bounce. The manual is good, plus you can go on YouTube and find a lot of videos to tweak. Sound quality is great. As most mention the bass and high hat pedals stink. Definitely you want to get the heavy duty pedals. I like the input that way you can play along using your phone or iPad. Only thing I wish it had was Bluetooth input. There are cheaper tabletop drum sets out there but if you want something built well this is great. Fits perfect on a snare stand I bought here in Amazon too. I do think it’s stupid that it doesn’t come with a power supply. Yes it’s easy to buy but something like this should come with it. Good buy!As for one handed drumming I bought a slightly longer set of drum sticks and I can actually use one stick to play snare and tap cymbal. One of the high points of this model is you can reprogram the pad positions. So I can use the tap cymbal next to the snare. I highly recommend this set if you are like me and have use of just one arm-hand.
J**R
Not just for beginners
I play drums and have for a long time. I built a purpose built building to play in years ago. Unfortunately I didn’t build it big enough and playing drums in it is a hassle. Since I primarily play bass these last few years I have not played drums much at all. I have two kits and one is stored, so I sold my inexpensive practice kit and got this. I’ve been really enjoying being able to get back into drums without all the space requirements. Thai allowed me to set up a little recording area. Now what’s cool here is that I can record either the audio from the really good kits on the machine, OR I can simply use this as a MIDI controller and use it to play drums that I can modify later. In fact in theory I could record two tracks at once. One from the machine that’s audio and a MIDI track. So lots of flexibility. None of the hassles of recording drums.PS I briefly had the Pyle version of this. While not bad, this is far superior and worth the extra $90.So here’s the pluses and minuses.Pros:-It’s Yamaha. It’s gonna be good y’all.-Pads are responsive and have good rebound. Not like a real drum really, but the feel is good. I think I play this better!-Great kits. Ridiculous amount of choices--Excellent MIDI controller.-Good time keeping exercises in form of songs and metronome-Compact. Can run off batteries. Play anywhereConsThere aren’t many…Here’s what I can gripe about.-Pedals. They’re just buttons. Difficult to work with especially if you are a drummer and expect better. Fix? You can upgrade the buttons with actual pedals. Yamaha makes a kick drum trigger that works with this as well as a high hat controller. I use a Simmons that also works well.-Pedals. Again. Here is the one issue that irritates the crap out of me. Even with the HH65 hi hat pedal, the response for open/close isn’t optimal. It works, but it’s not the same. Not quick enough. You can modify your action and get better response, but it’s just not there. This isn’t a slight on Yamaha really. The Pyle was just as bad. At this price point there’s gotta be a letdown. I will say though this isn’t that big of an issue since I use this to keep up my chops and record with. Any correction for missed hits can be corrected in MIDI manipulation later. By far not a deal breaker.-oh. And for the love of all holy, throw the sticks in the trash. Don’t even attempt to play with those unless you like splinters. I can’t believe Yamaha would include sticks that crappy.Aside from my minor gripes this is great. They have come a long long way with this from the DD5 from the 80s. . If you’re wanting to learn to play, or you’re a real drummer with space limitations? Go for this.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 day ago