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10 Best: Drum Machines 2024

We select 10 of the best contemporary analogue and digital hardware drum machines currently on the market, with models from Roland, Jomox, Korg, Teenage Engineering and more.

There’s a very strong argument that the drum machine market has never been in better health. The resurgence of hardware over the last few years has seen the market flooded with options to suit every budget and every taste. The range of options is particularly exciting, from ultra-purist analogue machines through to innovative digital devices that fit in your pocket. Whether you need a little toy to spark a few ideas or a full-on machine to act as the hub of your studio or live setup, there’s something for everyone.

Here we run through ten of our favourites…

Contents

What to look for

Analogue vs digital

The tired old debates about whether analogue or digital instruments are ‘better’ has thankfully died down a fair bit in recent years, but it’s still relevant in the case of drum machines. It’s not that the sound is necessarily always completely different, but analogue drum machines tend to have slightly more limited parameters in terms of tweaking and manipulating the sound.

Digital drum synthesis is usually a bit more versatile, even if it’s often based heavily on recreating the classic analogue sounds. Perhaps the best compromise is to combine the two approaches. Instruments like the Jomox Alpha Base combine analogue features with digital, giving you the best of both worlds.

Built-in sequencer?

Most classic drum machines have a built-in sequencer, usually some kind of step sequencer and often heavily inspired by the classic Roland TR-x0x machines of the 1980s. The benefits of this combination are obvious, making the unit a much more complete instrument in one box.

There are notable exceptions, however, and we’d hold the Vermona DRM1 up as an example of an excellent drum instrument which doesn’t have its own sequencer. The German brand refer to the instrument as an ‘analogue drum synthesiser’ rather than a drum machine, highlighting the difference. You’ll need to sequence it via MIDI or analogue trigger signals depending on which version you opt for, but its potent old-school sound makes it worth the added effort.

The best drum machines

If one brand reigns supreme as a colossus of drum machines, it can only be Roland. The Japanese company’s 80s offerings defined genres, from the TR-808 and its immeasurable impact on electro and hip-hop through to the TR-909 as a defining sound of house and techno.

The TR-8S is Roland’s current flagship model, something of a reboot of the classic machines in spirit, but very much a modern take rather than a simple clone or reissue. At heart, it’s a digital machine based around Roland’s Analogue Circuit Behaviour (ACB) technology, which recreates the subtleties of the old analogue circuits in order to emulate their sound. That means it can achieve highly realistic impressions of the aforementioned classic 808 and 909 sounds, plus the smaller TR-606 unit and digital machines like the TR-707.

Building on the original TR-8, which was all about ACB, the S model also adds the ability for users to load their own samples. That makes it a much more versatile machine, and allows you to take advantage of the excellent sequencing options, real-time effects and performance options. It’s a very immediate, hands-on instrument, which lends itself nicely to live performance as well as studio use. Purists might scoff at the idea of recreating classic analogue sounds digitally, but in practice you’d be hard pressed to spot a difference. The TR-8S is a user-friendly, hugely creative option that works just as well for newcomers to hardware drum machines and experienced hardware heads.

More info/buy
ProsCons
Recreates the sounds of classic Roland drum machinesPurists will favour the analogue originals
TR-8S adds option of user samples
Tech specs
Synthesis typeDigital/samples
FeaturesRoland ACB synthesis; real-time effects
Dimensions409 x 263 x 58 mm
Weight2.1 kg

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If it’s analogue you want, Moog has you covered. The iconic synth brand has never been a name you’d necessarily associate with drums, but that changed in 2017, when the DFAM (Drummer From Another Mother) was unveiled at Moogfest, the annual gathering at the brand’s North Carolina base.

The DFAM definitely suits experimental producers more than straightforward drum machines like the TR-8S. Scanning across the controls, you won’t find dedicated channels for kicks, snares, claps and cymbals like you’d see on most drum machines; instead, the controls relate to fundamental synth parameters like oscillator frequencies and filter cutoff. There’s also an array of 24 patch points for routing control signals and sound around different parts of the synth, opening up huge creative potential. Think of it as a semi-modular synth designed specifically for percussive sounds, with a built-in sequencer to tie it all together.

The format of the DFAM hints at Moog’s broader intentions: it’s a desktop module, but it’s also just the right size to fit into a Eurorack setup. As part of a bigger modular synth rack, it’s got amazing potential. The DFAM is the most experimental drum machine on our list – and possibly the one that requires the most work from the user to get the most out of it – but if you want to break away from familiar sounds and create your own from scratch, it’s probably the best option on the market.

More info/buy
ProsCons
An inspiring approach to drum synthesisRequires work to get the most out of it
Interfaces well with Eurorack gear
Tech specs
Synthesis typeAnalogue
FeaturesSemi-modular; Eurorack compatible
Dimensions319 x 107 x 133 mm
Weight1.6 kg

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Korg’s Volca series has been one of the most important product ranges of the last decade, helping to push forward the market for affordable, high quality instruments and redefining the kind of sound quality and sheer fun on offer at cheaper price points. Having begun life with a focus on analogue instruments, the range has expanded to include samplers and digital synths, plus the excellent Volca Drum, a drum machine based around a digital sound engine. Much of the character of the instrument comes from the Wave Guide section, consisting of three knobs to control decay, body and tone. It’s easy to use but capable of creating some really interesting percussive sounds. Like all Volcas, the Drum has a basic but effective sequencer built in, plus it runs on batteries, making it fully portable.

We can’t talk about Volca drum machines without also mentioning a couple of other models. The Volca Kick is mainly focused on kick drums but also capable of creating pitched tom hits, melodic zaps and bass sounds, making it an interesting creative option. The Volca Beats was one of the very first Volcas released, way back in 2013, and it’s a much more straightforward analogue unit with a bit more of a classic 80s sound. It may be an older product at this point but it remains very popular for good reason.

More info/buy
ProsCons
Great valueBasic plastic case doesn’t feel very pro
Surprisingly powerful sound
Tech specs
Synthesis typeDigital
Features6 parts; physical modelling
Dimensions193 x 115 x 39 mm
Weight370 g

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Having branched out from their roots in soft synth plugins, French brand Arturia very quickly became known for affordable analogue products, with the excellent MiniBrute and MicroBrute synths quickly followed by the DrumBrute drum machine. The original DrumBrute was a success thanks to its hands-on sequencing options, but some felt that its sound was a little bit too safe. The solution? The smaller but more aggressive DrumBrute Impact.

Like its bigger brother, the Impact is a fully analogue machine, with ten sounds (all dedicated to specific drums) and a step sequencer, plus all the MIDI and sync options you could need to play nicely with other hardware and software in a studio or live setup. It’s a great package for the money, offering a noticeable step up in versatility from cheaper options like the Volcas and Pocket Operators.

As far as affordable analogue drum machines go, an honourable mention must also go to the IK Multimedia Uno Drum, a small but powerful machine that comes in just a little cheaper than the Impact. It combines analogue sounds with samples to excellent effect. Its sequencing capabilities aren’t quite as good, but it’s still well worth a look as an alternative to the Impact.

More info/buy
ProsCons
Better sound than the original DrumBruteBudget feel and build
Very good sequencer
Tech specs
Synthesis typeAnalogue
Features10 analogue sounds; polyrhythm capabilities
Dimensions320 x 290 x 90 mm
Weight1.8 kg

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po-12
The best portable choice

Teenage Engineering might just be the most unique manufacturer in electronic music. Not content with producing a cult classic synth/sequencer/drum machine/thing in the form of the excellent OP-1, the Swedish brand took a complete left turn with the launch of the Pocket Operator range, consisting of tiny pocket calculator-style instruments produced in collaboration with the clothing brand Cheap Monday.

The range is now extensive, from samplers to synths and various drum machines, but the PO12 is our pick here. It must surely rank as one of the best value drum machines on the market, packing a surprising amount of options into a tiny case,

More info/buy
ProsCons
Way more powerful sound than you expectBasic design makes all Pocket Operators a bit small and fiddly
Lots of fun
Tech specs
Synthesis typeDigital/samples
FeaturesPunch-in effects; auto compressor
Dimensions178 x 89 x 5 mm
Weight60 g

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The purist’s choice

What would the purist’s choice of drum machine look like? Probably not far off the DRM1 MKIV, the latest incarnation of a hefty analogue unit with roots stretching all the way back to the 80s.

The DRM1 is a bit of a retro drum machine in a way, with eight dedicated channels, each of which is designed for a specific percussive purpose: a kick channel, a snare channel, two hi-hat channels, a clap, plus broader Drum and Multi channels. Each sound is based on an analogue circuit, with subtly different controls allowing you to dig into the parameters of each and twist the tone and timbre of the drum hits to create your own sound. It’s capable of everything from seriously weighty electro and techno grooves all the way through to experimental microhouse or minimal blips and bleeps.

The DRM is purely a sound module, with no sequencing capabilities on board, so it’s designed to be triggered by a separate sequencer or DAW (check out our list of the 10 Best MIDI drum controllers for some options, including the excellent Arturia BeatStep and BeatStep Pro). There are no effects and no patch memory for saving your settings, just a very pure and refined approach with a laser focus on sound quality. It’s a drum machine that oozes old-school class, and the perfect option for anyone who wants to keep things as simple as possible and focus purely on the sound.

More info/buy
ProsCons
The pinnacle of analogue drum synthesis?No built-in sequencer
Sounds incredible
Tech specs
Synthesis typeAnalogue
Features8 drum circuits; 73 parameter knobs
Dimensions483 x 225 x 125 mm
Weight3.7 kg

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The best weird choice

Soma Laboratory specialise in weird and wonderful instruments, and the Pulsar-23 drum machine is no exception. One of Soma’s ‘organismic’ instruments, following on from the Lyra-8 synth, the Pulsar is a semi-modular design with 23 independent modules, based around four separate channels (bass drum, bass/percussion, snare, and cymbals/hi-hat). The concept is based around the interaction of different elements, with the option to patch in modulation sources, touch-sensitive ‘resistive sensors’ and even CV sources from other synths. The whole unit can be triggered via MIDI, using the built-in looper/recorders, analogue triggers or using the built-in clock generator with dividers for rhythm creation.

It’s a complex, engaging setup, as well suited to experimental percussive sounds and synth elements as it is to more conventional drum hits. The Pulsar may be the least immediate option on our list, but it’s a drum machine which allows you to explore your own creative approaches, which should appeal to those who favour a more open-ended approach to music making. If the extensive options aren’t enough for you, there’s even an optional Utilities expander module which adds further amplifiers, waveshapers and more. It’s not for everyone, but the Pulsar-23 certainly represents the very best of the experimental end of the drum machine spectrum.

More info/buy
ProsCons
Weird and wonderfulDefinitely not a conventional drum machine
Can be expanded with optional Utilities module
Tech specs
Synthesis typeAnalogue
FeaturesSemi-modular with four independent channels; 23 separate patchable modules
Dimensions380 x 280 x 80 mm
Weight4 kg

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Roland’s TR-808 and TR-909 are undoubtedly the two most famous drum machines of all time, but we can’t help feeling that some of the brand’s other vintage products are unfairly overlooked. The TR-606 hasn’t been entirely forgotten, but it certainly doesn’t get the same kind of credit its big brothers do, which is a shame because it’s a great drum machine in its own right. It’s simpler than the 808 and 909, with very few options to shape the individual hits, but it’s a very pure, organic-sounding machine with a lovely soulful kick and some of the nicest hi-hats you’ll ever hear.

Cyclone Analogic are best known for their TT-303, which clones the classic Roland TB-303 to great effect, but in our opinion their TT-606 is just as exciting – if not more so considering the fact it’s the only serious 606 clone on the market. Like the TT-303, it’s an updated version which sounds almost identical to the original while adding modern features like MIDI, rimshot and clap sounds (the original didn’t have either) plus a more advanced sequencer.

More info/buy
ProsCons
A tribute to a low-key classicSome prefer the more famous sound of the 808 or 909
Distinctive sounds, including incredible hi-hats
Tech specs
Synthesis typeAnalogue
FeaturesRoland TR-606 clone; x0x sequencer
Dimensions310 x 130 x 35 mm
Weight783 g

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The Erica Synths Perkons HD-01 is a drum machine which bucks many of the recent trends in studio tech. It’s big, heavy and it’s agnostic when it comes to the tired old analogue vs digital debate. In terms of how it works, the Perkons certainly isn’t a throwback. There are four hybrid voices, each with a digital sound engine which feeds into a multi-mode analogue filter and analogue overdrive circuit. The Perkons is an uncompromising, unique design, but based on Erica’s track record that’s no bad thing.

Controls for the four voices are visually identical, but the four circuits are based on different sound generation algorithms, giving them all their own range of sounds and lending them better to different percussive elements. With a total of 33 different sound engines to choose from, very few modes are specifically intended for use as a single type of percussion instrument. Sonically, the various algorithms can do ‘analogue’-sounding kicks and snares as well as more realistic impressions of acoustic percussion instruments, but overall the character lends itself particularly well to darker, more edgy sounds. The Perkons feels ideally suited to techno, electro and tech-house in particular.

The Perkons ticks so many boxes when it comes to features that you’re very unlikely to be disappointed – MIDI and trigger inputs, insert effects for each voice, digitally emulated bucket brigade delay, analogue bus compressor, and so on – but it’s in terms of character where it really shines, with a powerful, gritty tone and exceptional versatility in terms of shaping and sculpting different sounds.

More info/buy
ProsCons
Immense sound with unique character and hands-on playabilityOnly four voices (but you’ll probably find that’s enough given the way the Perkons works)
Exceptional sequencer with parameter automation, per-track time divisions and multiplications, per-step ratchets and probabilities
Tech specs
Synthesis typeHybrid digital engines with analogue processing
Features33 sound engines; four-track sequencer; digital delay and analogue master compressor
Dimensions454 x 315 x 90 mm
Weight3.7 kg

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The best all-rounder

Things start getting serious very quickly at the top end of the drum machine market. Smaller models might specialise in one or two areas – and many of them do a very good job of it – but if you’re dropping serious cash on a drum machine you probably want an all-rounder. The Jomox Alpha Base is even more refined and versatile than the Tanzbär 2, but it’s cut from similar cloth, with an analogue heart plus some sample-based features, huge sequencing capabilities and a versatile, powerful sound that can work for pretty much any genre or style of electronic music.

The range of sound sources in the Alpha Base is its biggest strength, with pure analogue channels for sounds like kicks and snares, then sample-based channels with analogue processing (filters, envelopes and noise sources) to offer more sonic range. There’s also a six-voice FM synth engine for percussive sounds, plus simpler digital channels with external sampling input so you can sample your own sounds directly into the unit. It’s a huge array of features that can stand up against absolutely any drum machine you could name.

This is proper, serious, weighty stuff. The Alpha Base is a particular favourite of lots of techno producers, and it’s not hard to understand why when you hear it. An absolute weapon.

More info/buy
ProsCons
Incredibly versatile all-rounder with immense soundJomox quality comes at a price
Excellent sequencer
Tech specs
Synthesis typeAnalogue/digital/samples
Features11 instruments; multimode filter
Dimensions410 x 240 x 80 mm
Weight3.3 kg

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In summary

Drum machines are part of the fabric of electronic music, helping to shape and define genres since the 1970s – just think of hip-hop without the TR-808 or techno without the TR-909.

There are countless excellent options on the market these days, starting with affordable models like the Korg Volca and building up to ultra-fancy high-end options like the Jomox Alpha Base.

You don’t necessarily need to spend huge money to get . A special shout goes to the Vermona DRM1, which punches way above its price point thanks to its precisely refined analogue circuits. It’s an outlier in the sense that it doesn’t have a built-in sequencer, but team it with something like an Arturia BeatStep and it’s a modern classic.

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