Here's 2 short examples of Roland's use of velocity switching within their drum kits, and the use of natural effects such as snare buzz on the toms, and use of ghost notes.
This first one I just played on the fly. Pressed record on my Fostex, and went from there
I used the Rock Kit. Listen to the toms, and you'll hear natural snare buzz. The bongos will also show the velocity switching.
http://www.esnips.com/doc/78b72d7d-7789-4c89-89ab-86014b8f5e06/DRUMS This second demo are the (TOMS) from the "Jazz Kit". Pay close attention to how the sound of the tom deepens, pops, and spreads sonically when the curve is triggered.
http://www.esnips.com/doc/47be2dec-5065-4ee2-8d9d-3309245411c8/Drums-2 I want to point out that what makes Roland's kits sound so "live" is because of the natural ambience and natural effects included in the raw samples themselves. An acoustic drum kit "isn't squeaky clean" as found on other brands. When the sound is "over processed, and the track is over quantized", and those effects are stripped away--you will lose that "live feeling".
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GEAR: Yamaha MOXF-6, Casio MZX-500, Roland Juno-Di, M-Audio Venom, Roland RS-70, Yamaha PSR S700, M-Audio Axiom Pro-61 (Midi Controller). SOFTWARE: Mixcraft-7, PowerTracks Pro Audio 2013, Beat Thang Virtual, Dimension Le.