by 109-1176549166 » Mon May 07, 2007 7:47 pm
Trickyricky,
I, too, have a Handsonic 15 like Bongorific. Nothing beats having your main percussion instruments to be acoustic in terms of pure sound, dynamics and visual impact, of course. But, on the other hand, having a Handsonic 10 or 15 enables you to have on demand other percussion instruments too numerous to enumerate here and are physically impractical to lug around in their acoustic version.
I also happen to be a sound technician with some amount of formal training but lots of on-the-job experience. In fact, I own a full set of high-end live band sound system complete with monitors and subwoofers.
Having said this, if you'll be using your Handsonic 10 in a band (during gigs or rehearsals) and your band's sound system already have monitors, then it's my opinion that you don't have to have your own amplifier. Just plug your Handsonic directly to the mixer and ask your sound technician to feed you back with your own electronic percussion sound via the monitor(s).
And if you're just practicing at home by yourself, then you can just listen through your headset earphones as your "quiet" amplifiers. That's the advantage and beauty of electronic percussion.
I happen to be a guitarist, too, and own a Martin electric acoustic guitar and a SWR California B. acoustic guitar amplifier. The California B. has 2 separate channels and, therefore, 2 instrument inputs. If I have to bring my SWR, I just use it as my percussion amplifier, too.
During gigs that require only my percussion instruments and not my guitar, though, I find that most of the time I don't have to bring my SWR.
Hope this helps,
Manny T.