
Roland HPD-20 HandSonic Hand Percussion Controller
With 13 velocity-sensitive pads, 850 ready-to-play sounds, and the ability to import samples, the Roland HPD-20 takes hand percussion to the next level.
$1,399.99
- 18 x
- 12 x$116.67
- 8 x$175.00
Roland HPD-15 HandSonic Percussion Controller
No longer available at zZounds


zZounds Gear Experts Say...
Dramatically simplify your percussion rig with this unique and versatile electronic hand percussion pad from Roland. The HPD-15 features touch-sensitive pads that react to position, velocity, muting, and pitch and can be comfortably controlled with your hands or fingers.
Overview
There are going to be those percussionists that will look at this instrument like it was sent from the great drum god in the sky; while for others, it will require a heroic leap of faith. Read on.
It is pretty fair to say that the Roland boys hit a home run with their V-drums COSM (physical modeling) digital kit. It plays like the real thing, sounds like the real thing, and solves a whole bunch of problems, from space requirements to recording, and from monitoring to hauling. No drummer, of any level of proficiency or financial worth, could haul around the equipment to have the same level of versatility that the V-drums kit gives you. OK, there's a bit of an adjustment curve, but if you're skilled at all, you catch the drift of this rig really quick.
So Roland, eggheads that they are, said "If this technology is so cool for trap drummers, why not make it available for the drummers that don't necessarily sit behind a kit?" And here is the HPD15. Probably even a better idea than the kit, when you get down to brass tacks. Who has to lug around more stuff than a hand percussionist? That stuff is usually hand made by folks who aren't exactly "around the corner," if you get our drift. And that stuff isn't usually easy to mic up, either. The HPD-15, like the V-drums, solves a whole bunch of problems.
Here's a real big one, and we'll bet that the percussionists who think about this will want this rig based on the solution to this problem alone. You're a percussionist in a working… read more band. It's a crap-shoot each week as to the size of the stage you'll get. You've got congas, maybe timbales, and a suitcase or trap-case full of all the little toys that make you the coolest member of the band. When the stage is good, you can set up your table and go to town. When the stage is tiny, you might pass up using your toys, because you have nowhere to put them, or might be afraid to take them out. Are we painting a familiar picture?
Now imagine you get to the gig with your HPD15 under one arm, and its stand in the other. The amount of room needed is about the size of your tumba, plus you. You send a set of cords to your PA system from your HPD15, then sit down with a cool beverage, and watch the keyboard player sweat and curse as he's making multiple trips back to the van.
Your HPD15 has a 15-segment, touch-sensitive pad that reacts to position, velocity, muting, and pitch. The sound engine has 300 percussion and drum sounds from around the world. An onboard effects unit gives reverb and other multi-effects. Change the programs with ease, and the pads become whatever you want them to be. Use muting and pressure techniques for control, just like real drums. Use alternate controllers like the infra-red D-beam or ribbon for unique effects. When the gig is done, you're on the road while the regular drummer is putting his cymbals away.
Yes, it's radical. Yes, it will take a little bit of adjustment. But weigh the end advantages against the short amount of time that it will take you to master this thing. You'll have every instrument at every gig, "mic'd" perfectly. You'll never leave a smaller instrument behind, or on the floor for a wayward dancer (or singer) to walk upon, or get stolen.
This is the future of percussion, folks. The time is now.
- 10-inch rubber pad with 15 parts for triggering up to 15 sounds simultaneously
- Built-in pressure sensor allows for realistic muting and pitch control of sounds
- Main pad supports Positional Sensing for realistic timbre changes depending on area of pad hit
- Built-in sequencer with 300 percussion and drum sounds from around the world
- Onboard effects include dedicated reverb and multi-effects processors
- Realtime control via D-Beam Controller, dual ribbon controllers, three control knobs
- MIDI In/Out plus dual-trigger input and hi-hat control jack. read less
It is pretty fair to say that the Roland boys hit a home run with their V-drums COSM (physical modeling) digital kit. It plays like the real thing, sounds like the real thing, and solves a whole bunch of problems, from space requirements to recording, and from monitoring to hauling. No drummer, of any level of proficiency or financial worth, could haul around the equipment to have the same level of versatility that the V-drums kit gives you. OK, there's a bit of an adjustment curve, but if you're skilled at all, you catch the drift of this rig really quick.
So Roland, eggheads that they are, said "If this technology is so cool for trap drummers, why not make it available for the drummers that don't necessarily sit behind a kit?" And here is the HPD15. Probably even a better idea than the kit, when you get down to brass tacks. Who has to lug around more stuff than a hand percussionist? That stuff is usually hand made by folks who aren't exactly "around the corner," if you get our drift. And that stuff isn't usually easy to mic up, either. The HPD-15, like the V-drums, solves a whole bunch of problems.
Here's a real big one, and we'll bet that the percussionists who think about this will want this rig based on the solution to this problem alone. You're a percussionist in a working… read more band. It's a crap-shoot each week as to the size of the stage you'll get. You've got congas, maybe timbales, and a suitcase or trap-case full of all the little toys that make you the coolest member of the band. When the stage is good, you can set up your table and go to town. When the stage is tiny, you might pass up using your toys, because you have nowhere to put them, or might be afraid to take them out. Are we painting a familiar picture?
Now imagine you get to the gig with your HPD15 under one arm, and its stand in the other. The amount of room needed is about the size of your tumba, plus you. You send a set of cords to your PA system from your HPD15, then sit down with a cool beverage, and watch the keyboard player sweat and curse as he's making multiple trips back to the van.
Your HPD15 has a 15-segment, touch-sensitive pad that reacts to position, velocity, muting, and pitch. The sound engine has 300 percussion and drum sounds from around the world. An onboard effects unit gives reverb and other multi-effects. Change the programs with ease, and the pads become whatever you want them to be. Use muting and pressure techniques for control, just like real drums. Use alternate controllers like the infra-red D-beam or ribbon for unique effects. When the gig is done, you're on the road while the regular drummer is putting his cymbals away.
Yes, it's radical. Yes, it will take a little bit of adjustment. But weigh the end advantages against the short amount of time that it will take you to master this thing. You'll have every instrument at every gig, "mic'd" perfectly. You'll never leave a smaller instrument behind, or on the floor for a wayward dancer (or singer) to walk upon, or get stolen.
This is the future of percussion, folks. The time is now.
Features
- Electronic hand percussion pad with triggering based on V-drums technology- 10-inch rubber pad with 15 parts for triggering up to 15 sounds simultaneously
- Built-in pressure sensor allows for realistic muting and pitch control of sounds
- Main pad supports Positional Sensing for realistic timbre changes depending on area of pad hit
- Built-in sequencer with 300 percussion and drum sounds from around the world
- Onboard effects include dedicated reverb and multi-effects processors
- Realtime control via D-Beam Controller, dual ribbon controllers, three control knobs
- MIDI In/Out plus dual-trigger input and hi-hat control jack. read less
Specs
Pad: 10 in. Rubber Pad (divided into 15 parts)
Sound Source:
Instruments: 300
Preset Patches: 80
User Memory Patches: 80
Effect Types: Reverb, Multi Effects
Maximum Polyphony: 64 voices
Patch Chain: 10 chains (32 steps per chain)
Sequencer Patterns:
Preset: 99
User: Maximum 99
Parts: 5
Tempo: 20 to 260
Display: Backlit, 16-character, 2-line
Connectors: MIX In (Stereo), Output (L/Mono, R), Phones, Dual Trigger Input, Footswitch, Expressions/Hi-Hat control, MIDI (IN, OUT)
Power Supply: AC Adapter (DC9V)
Dimensions (L x D x H): 402 x 402 x 98mm (15-7/8 x 15-7/8 x 3-7/8 in.)
Weight: 3kg (6 lbs. 10 oz.)
Sound Source:
Instruments: 300
Preset Patches: 80
User Memory Patches: 80
Effect Types: Reverb, Multi Effects
Maximum Polyphony: 64 voices
Patch Chain: 10 chains (32 steps per chain)
Sequencer Patterns:
Preset: 99
User: Maximum 99
Parts: 5
Tempo: 20 to 260
Display: Backlit, 16-character, 2-line
Connectors: MIX In (Stereo), Output (L/Mono, R), Phones, Dual Trigger Input, Footswitch, Expressions/Hi-Hat control, MIDI (IN, OUT)
Power Supply: AC Adapter (DC9V)
Dimensions (L x D x H): 402 x 402 x 98mm (15-7/8 x 15-7/8 x 3-7/8 in.)
Weight: 3kg (6 lbs. 10 oz.)
Roland's Description
Roland HPD-15 Handsonic Controller
There are going to be those percussionists that will look at this instrument like it was sent from the great drum god in the sky; while for others, it will require a heroic leap of faith. Read on.It is pretty fair to say that the Roland boys hit a home run with their V-drums COSM (physical modeling) digital kit. It plays like the real thing, sounds like the real thing, and solves a whole bunch of problems, from space requirements to recording, and from monitoring to hauling. No drummer, of any level of proficiency or financial worth, could haul around the equipment to have the same level of versatility that the V-drums kit gives you. OK, there's a bit of an adjustment curve, but if you're skilled at all, you catch the drift of this rig really quick.
So Roland, eggheads that they are, said "If this technology is so cool for trap drummers, why not make it available for the drummers that don't necessarily sit behind a kit?" And here is the HPD15. Probably even a better idea than the kit, when you get down to brass tacks. Who has to lug around more stuff than a hand percussionist? And that stuff is usually hand made by folks who aren't exactly "around the corner," if you get our drift. And that stuff isn't usually easy to mike up, either. The HPD15, like the V-drums, solves a whole bunch of problems.
Here's a real big one, and we'll bet that the percussionists who think about this will want this rig based on the solution to this problem alone. You're a percussionist in a working band. It's a crap-shoot each week as to the size of the stage you'll get. You've got congas, maybe timbales, and a suitcase or trap-case full of all the little toys that make you the coolest member of the band. When the stage is good, you can set up your table and go to town. When the stage is tiny, you might pass up using your toys, because you have nowhere to put them, or might be afraid to take them out. Are we painting a familiar picture?
Now imagine you get to the gig with your HPD15 under one arm, and its stand in the other. The amount of room needed is about the size of your tumba, plus you. You send a set of cords to your PA system from your HPD15, then sit down with a cool beverage, and watch the keyboard player sweat and curse as he's making multiple trips back to the van.
Your HPD15 has a 15-segment, touch-sensitive pad that reacts to position, velocity, muting, and pitch. The sound engine has 300 percussion and drum sounds from around the world. An onboard effects unit gives reverb and other multi-effects. Change the programs with ease, and the pads become whatever you want them to be. Use muting and pressure techniques for control, just like real drums. Use alternate controllers like the infra-red D-beam or ribbon for unique effects. When the gig is done, you're on the road while the regular drummer is putting his cymbals away.
Yes, it's radical. Yes, it will take a little bit of adjustment. But weigh the end advantages against the short amount of time that it will take you to master this thing. You'll have every instrument at every gig, "mic'd" perfectly. You'll never leave a smaller instrument behind, or on the floor for a wayward dancer (or singer) to walk upon, or get stolen.
This is the future of percussion, folks. The time is now.
Features
Electronic hand percussion pad with triggering based on V-drums technology
10-inch rubber pad with 15 parts for triggering up to 15 sounds simultaneously
Built-in pressure sensor allows for realistic muting and pitch control of sounds
Main pad supports Positional Sensing for realistic timbre changes depending on area of pad hit
Built-in sequencer with 300 percussion and drum sounds from around the world
Onboard effects include dedicated reverb and multi-effects processors
Realtime control via D-Beam Controller, dual ribbon controllers, three control knobs
MIDI In/Out plus dual-trigger input and hi-hat control jack.
Reviews
Reviewers gave this product an overall rating of 5 out of 5 stars.
(116 ratings)
Submitted December 14, 2004 by a customer from mindspring.com
"ive said enough- just go out and check it out if your serious. if you just want to play then maybe a this isnt the toy. i will"
This review has been selected by our experts as particularly helpful.
there is no other product out there, unless of course apple comes out with something to play percussion on by hand -and i dont mean garage band.
look roland makes the best and most innovative drum and and digital percussion out there.
what else is there?
Sound
if you are familiar with the roland stuff then picking up the logic of programming and processing the sounds shuold be familiar. as with roland drum samples, they are all top notch and that goes for the percussions samples. all there sampled beautifully- except maybe things like guitar, flutes . but the percussion sounds and the ability to process them anyway you want and save them into a memory as well as chaining them is great . tips- i would stongly recommend a foot pedal trigger for programming anything - like a kick pedal.on a kit its been great for playing kit patches or mixing a kick sound into some other percussion patch like darbukka, tabla etc etc. can give the sound a totally different feel thatn being relagated to playing a straight sound always on only one instrument. you will find that you will become more attenutated to playing mulitinstuments simulateneously and sounds. i would also strongly recommend a volume pedal whiich i use constantly as well as a good set of headphones. great for practicing without bothereing anyone- headphones are a must to monitor yourself if playing with others and changing your patches, processing etc etc, then of course you could think of… read more a boss looper and some foot switches as well for on/off functions heh!
Features
the main review didnt state that it has midi capabilities which for this hand controlled unit- instead of stick- is incredible. with velocity and pressure sensitive pads the ability to "bend " sounds" with the heel and alter pitch in real time is close to playing the real thing. acutally ive been playing severeal years on this and discovered that its better not to compare it to the analog counterpart. hpd 15 is its own thing and discovery of so many more possiblites of rythym tempo with affects that could not have been found using just sticking to analog. although is still love playing those congas and the dunbek- one last thing- most percussionists will marvel if you use this unit for a while that you have solved the mic problem- no feedbacks, no hum just clean soound and if you get 2 amps you output signal on the hpd 15 is in stereo. if you are playing a patch with several insturments included they can be played in stereo if your amps also can be linked- like the rolands
Quality
few things i would say since playin a bit- the silver surface finish will wear off in areas of constant use- around the edge rims like a conga. also i have found that the rubber triggers end up wearing unusually fast and have worn down with finger pressure- the sound has not been affected though.
Value
yes, but still pricey
Manufacturer Support
havent had a need to fix or repair anything yet. i use the roland (2) digital amps linked as stereo with limited mixing capabilites. great units for the hpd-15 no problems either and excellent response
The Wow Factor
pretty cool loooking and performing. minimal jetson with incredibly big sounds. people alwys get g=blown away when they hear you dialing in a kit patch and playing some of that out of your little hpd. they dont believe it-
Musical Background:
avisual artist and part time musican
Musical Style:
man, well now electronic, drum and bass, traditional middle eastern, classical indian, altenative and rock, some country, polka, read less
Sound
if you are familiar with the roland stuff then picking up the logic of programming and processing the sounds shuold be familiar. as with roland drum samples, they are all top notch and that goes for the percussions samples. all there sampled beautifully- except maybe things like guitar, flutes . but the percussion sounds and the ability to process them anyway you want and save them into a memory as well as chaining them is great . tips- i would stongly recommend a foot pedal trigger for programming anything - like a kick pedal.on a kit its been great for playing kit patches or mixing a kick sound into some other percussion patch like darbukka, tabla etc etc. can give the sound a totally different feel thatn being relagated to playing a straight sound always on only one instrument. you will find that you will become more attenutated to playing mulitinstuments simulateneously and sounds. i would also strongly recommend a volume pedal whiich i use constantly as well as a good set of headphones. great for practicing without bothereing anyone- headphones are a must to monitor yourself if playing with others and changing your patches, processing etc etc, then of course you could think of… read more a boss looper and some foot switches as well for on/off functions heh!
Features
the main review didnt state that it has midi capabilities which for this hand controlled unit- instead of stick- is incredible. with velocity and pressure sensitive pads the ability to "bend " sounds" with the heel and alter pitch in real time is close to playing the real thing. acutally ive been playing severeal years on this and discovered that its better not to compare it to the analog counterpart. hpd 15 is its own thing and discovery of so many more possiblites of rythym tempo with affects that could not have been found using just sticking to analog. although is still love playing those congas and the dunbek- one last thing- most percussionists will marvel if you use this unit for a while that you have solved the mic problem- no feedbacks, no hum just clean soound and if you get 2 amps you output signal on the hpd 15 is in stereo. if you are playing a patch with several insturments included they can be played in stereo if your amps also can be linked- like the rolands
Quality
few things i would say since playin a bit- the silver surface finish will wear off in areas of constant use- around the edge rims like a conga. also i have found that the rubber triggers end up wearing unusually fast and have worn down with finger pressure- the sound has not been affected though.
Value
yes, but still pricey
Manufacturer Support
havent had a need to fix or repair anything yet. i use the roland (2) digital amps linked as stereo with limited mixing capabilites. great units for the hpd-15 no problems either and excellent response
The Wow Factor
pretty cool loooking and performing. minimal jetson with incredibly big sounds. people alwys get g=blown away when they hear you dialing in a kit patch and playing some of that out of your little hpd. they dont believe it-
Musical Background:
avisual artist and part time musican
Musical Style:
man, well now electronic, drum and bass, traditional middle eastern, classical indian, altenative and rock, some country, polka, read less
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