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Hello, All! I found an interesting shareware program called "SoundRaider" (www.andyw.com/raider). It doesn't do what you're looking for, but it's hugely fun. When launched, SoundRaider scans your drive for WAV files (you can restrict its search to a particular directory and subdirectories). Then, on a periodic basis, it randomly selects a file, randomly selects a portion of the file (I think), randomly applies changes (half-speed, double speed, etc), and loops a portion of the file. It does this process on five independent channels. From the SoundRaider homepage: "SoundRaider is a music creation tool that works by scanning your hard drive for WAV format sounds and uses them to create industrial-ambient sound.Leave SoundRaider running on the desktop and listen to your hard drive muttering to itself." Now what I find especially cool, is how the content of the WAV files effect the operation. For example, use a bunch of drum patterns and you get one effect, use files of spoken word and you get a totally different effect. I have a bunch of didjeridu, Tibetan singing bowl, and Waterphone wave files and I get a cool etheral thing happening (most of the time). I plan on using this in live performance but I haven't exactly decided how, yet. Is it art? Is it Art? Who cares? - Dennis Leas