No derailment noted
It's a tragicomedy: the drummer uses an Octapad for the various synth drum sounds in various cover tunes: LinnDrum whipcrack beats, Simmons, handclaps, etc. In fact, he uses it in the space where one or more traditional toms would go. The Octapad is about the size of cafeteria tray, as you may know. Small, right? Saves room?
I wish. His choice of amplification for the pad is a gratuitously huge PA speaker...reaches above waist height as it sits on the floor. It's partially visible in the second photo. God knows what its power rating is but it's far beyond any need we would ever have and it if were maxed it would peel paint off the walls. While we guitarists fret about FRFRs and cabs now we have to wonder about FRFRs for drummers! I'm convinced he could get by with HeadRush 112 or even a 108. I don't know if it's what he uses because he doesn't own anything else or 'it's the way we've always done it.'
He's a quality player but he must be counted among the multitudes of drummers who simply won't give up the real thing including cymbals. At one point he had a virtual kick setup and that saved a ton of room but now we're back to the space-hogging real kick.
And, for the final irony, the rehearsal space is setup with a full Alesis e-drumkit. 6 toms, kick, snare, 4-5 e-cymbals. But it's kept there for rehearsal only (apparently) even when it would solve musical, live sound and floorspace issues.
In a band with a setlist full of songs that were originally recorded using some type of synth drum, drum machine the e-drum approach makes even more sense. I know they probably aren't fun to set up and tear down and I know that caveman drummers love pounding their skins and real cymbals but if I'm reducing my backline amp footprint to zero and my pedalboard footprint by 75% I can't be the only one making an effort.