🎶 Beat the Ordinary with the RD-6-AM!
The Behringer RD-6-AM Analog Drum Machine in striking yellow features USB/MIDI connectivity, 8 versatile drum voices, 2 trigger outputs, and a 16-step sequencer, making it an essential tool for music producers looking to elevate their sound.
J**E
Great 606 clone!
If you’re looking for a great replication of the famous TR-606, this is the unit to have. It’s made even better when syncing it up with the TD-3. No, you can’t edit the drum sounds. It does what it does. But it sounds great. It has full USB and MIDI capabilities, so you can sync it with other synths, use it with a DAW, and you can play the drums manually through MIDI. It is limited, but it’s cheap. And that makes it worth it. If you want to do more, then save your pennies and spend the extra two to three hundred bucks for those features you n other units. But you can’t knock this, because the price is cheap. And for that you get a genuine analogue drum machine. Even if it’s just used as a toy to mess around with, it’s still worth picking one up.
M**N
I love the price
Once I figure it all out I'll have tons of fun there's so many YouTube videos on how it works Behringer rocks for the price for sure the way to go
O**E
amazing
amazing product, if you are new to music and synths basically a great device
J**B
Yes, a Behringer clone. But, a clone that improves on the original
If you remember the original TR 606, you will rember that it actually was NOT that good of a drum machine for what they go for. Cheap plastic, non tweakable drum sounds and a price that was way too much for what you got. But, when prices crashed in the early 90's, Acid House musicians made these the hot machine to get.The new Behringer RD-6 actually improves on the original, with a distortion section and semi-individual outputs. The cheap plastic construction is still there, but would it be a 606 without it?The sound is nearly identical to the original after A/B'ing the two. I say "nearly", because for some reason they swiped the clap from a Boss rhythm machine and placed it on the exact same channel as the hi hat. This means that not only is the gain shared between the two, but so is the output. This leads to some minor irritation trying to get a live jam mix balanced, but if that is the worst sin this machine makes, I can live with that.The distortion section is nice and crunchy and the pattern creation is as simple as it gets. I had this out of the box and patched making music in no more than 5 minutes. The yellow colour is cute, too. A far more fun change from the easily bashed up silver of the original.Is it a clone? Yes. But, Roland overcharges for nostalgia anyways, and at the end of the day, Behringer actually improved on both the 303 and 606.
M**N
Incredible
Awesome
R**R
Real Analog, Real 80's Sequencer
The RD-6 is exactly what it purports to be: a clone (improved in those areas where it is not exact) of one of the classic analog drum machines the Roland TR-606, a defining, usually in the company of its intended companion device, the Roland TB-303 bassline synthesizer, element of the Acid House sound. While there are a few nice added features that the original TB-303 didn't have, the machine is, at its heart, an early 80's drum machine. The analog drum sounds are nicely dialed in to begin with, which is good because there is nothing you can do to them without modifying the device except adjust their volume. If you want a tweakable analog drum machine, look at the TD-8. 4In particular, the hats on this machine are simply gorgeous. Brassy and complex.There are a few differences between this device and the original: 1) this adds a clap sound taken from the Boss DR-110, which is nice because it's a great clap, 2) It has USB midi (but not usb audio), and it has an added Distortion section based on the Boss DS-1. However, it's NOT a modern instrument in any sense. It's exactly what it's a clone of, actually, a cheap, plastic, drum machine which was paired with a cheap plastic bassline synth (which sounds nothing like a bass) and was basically a commercial failure. People complaining about the construction have probably never held a real one. This thing sounds great, and it's a lot of drum machine for the money.
A**E
Essential Acid House Beats
If you close your eyes, turn back the clock roughly 30 years, and step inside your mind to the strange acid loops of the TB303 & it’s sister/brother (you decide) the TR606, then you might be able to capture those vibes at a price for a night out. This is Behringer’s clone of the TR606, but you have the same sound with a bit of distortion, and a extra hand clap.First things first. It’s analog. Doesn’t run on batteries, and you can’t change the drum sounds other than the distortion you can select. And rather limited on internal memory for your patterns. 16 steps, 32 patterns.Sounds limiting, yes, but there’s ways around it. Look in the back and you have 6 mini jacks for each drum sound. Plug a cable in and route it to other guitar pedals, FX units, filters, compressors, etc, and now you further flavor your sound.You have a sync in/out on the front panel, and if you’re into modular gear, the low & high toms can be triggered to your CV synths. Not to mention a added clap from the Boss DR110 drum machine.Sync this to your TD3 or MS1, or your Korg Volcas, and you can now have fun for something that would cost you a down payment on a new vehicle on eBay if you bought the originals. But you have a bargain investing in this.If you have a DAW, you can easily back up your patterns from USB. And there’s a bunch of different colors to choose from.If you can live with its limits, this drum machine captures the sound of the 606. Either you want that sound or you want a RD8 or RD9 (808/909 clones). Regardless, if you make Electro, Breaks, House, Techno, it’s something worth looking into. Rock or metal more you thing, maybe not. (It doesn’t sound ANYTHING like an acoustic drum kit)Have fun if you buy one!
D**M
Sounds Nice
This is a nice little machine, but the build quality is extremely flimsy and I'm not sure it will last more than a year or two. Which is probably fine, given the low price. This is just my personal preference, but I would have been delighted if Behringer charged a little more on their current batch of clones and upped the build quality a notch or two. But Behringer has a well-deserved reputation for bargain basement gear, and I guess you get what you pay for...
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