I'm not quite sure what you mean by an "explosive" drum track. But after years of doing this stuff I've learned that there isn't really a special trick for anything. It's all about understanding what you've got and what it needs to get it to sound how you want, as vague as that sounds. Years of practice and experience in short..
Anyway, some techniques I would suggest learning that are very useful for drums in general:
* Practice EQ'ing them.
* Learn to use compression in general along with making drums punchier or fatter, making them groove with drum bus compression, and use of parallel compression after those techniques. You can also look into Sidechain compression for that classic EDM pumping sound if you're into that sort of thing, but you can do very similar (and often groovier) things with drum bus compression, especially if you compress the drum bus and bassline (or any other part/s of the song together).
* Use of distortion/saturation/soft clipping to give them a bit of grit (although this usually makes them lose punch).
* Transient shapers (
Learn compressors first as these are both very similar tools but compression is far more important to grasp and will serve you well in the long run - trust me!).
* Use of reverb to make drums bigger, using the reverb's 'Pre-delay' setting (often with a setting of around 10-30ms) to allow a dryer, upfront punch at the beginning of the drum hit, if desired. Without using any Pre-delay on reverb, drums will usually sound more distant, but sometimes you want that.
Have fun, and if that all sounds like too much, then a simple idea to get started would be to route all of your drums to a single mixer track (which will in turn become a 'Drum Bus') and put a compressor on it. And for the sake of learning, set the ratio to about 4:1 or 5:1 and really dig in with the threshold so that the compressor is really working (doing about 5 - 10db of compression on each Kick & Snare hit), then try changing the attack setting to see how it affects the sound, then do the same with the release setting etc. Of course, you don't normally want that much compression happening as it sucks the life out of your drums, making them lose their punch and sound very flat, but it's a good way of learning compression when you're starting out