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>Is >there a password or secret handshake or something? I've got a GTR4000 with no sampler installed so I can only comment on the basic unit as a looper. I've also got the Alchemy card, tho, whose manual describes some intriguing looping presets for use with the sampler card...which BTW is capable of storing multiple samples. I'll copy out a few of 'em here, from the manual pages in question...but first, my $0.02 on the secret Eventide handshake (all I have left after joining the club): (rant begins) Initiation fees are of course the first hurdle, but with the advent of their new super processor (Orville), prices have dropped significantly...by around $1000 for each 4000 series piece. Once you get your rocketship home, and after a few religious experiences with the presets, you'll want to open the control panels and make some of your own....ha! Programmed a few multiFX in yer day and think you know yer stuff, do ya? Next initiation fee: correspondence classes in audio engineering and higher math, with a minor in computer programming would be a good start. Eventide's audio tech guy Scott Gilfix is a total champ, but a solid foundation in the liberal and fine arts, plus YEARS spent happily and profitably hunched over the front panels of FX from Ensoniq, Roland, tc, Korg, Lexicon, etc., has NOT rendered more than about 15% of what he's told me understandable--let alone what I can find in the manuals. I admit this with dismay, fully aware (or at least suspecting) that many if not most on this list will be much better able than I am to deal with the almost unlimited possibilities in any Eventide, but I gotta throw out a well-considered "Bullshit" to all the reviews I've read that talk about ease of programming--Tweaking, sure, yes/programming, NO. Even if you know the code, you gotta build everything from parts, creating your own specs for every detail, down to the number of digits of parameter resolution after the decimal point (it's simple, really: %Y.Xf). Want a plain-vanilla delay that's not quite there in the presets? FIRST, you gotta built your own feedback path with one of many available mixer modules, then create a knob to control it...but sorry, you still can't control that from an external foot pedal--haven't figured out yet how to set that up with a user-created parameter (tho it is easy on factory-preset params). Want to add an LFO to mod something? First, you gotta add a module to convert its output from audio to control, then pick and configure a math module to tell it how to act or even to limit its range, THEN set up a knob if you want to adjust it..... Powerful stuff, of course, but NOT user-friendly or efficient. Do I want to sell mine? Absolutely not, unless I lose my struggle with Orville lust. There IS a 4000-series mailing list...I'm on it and have seen less than a dozen messages in the last year, mostly about Orville...does this mean that nobody else knows the secret handshake either? I don't know. They're not talking. (rant over) Non-sampler looping: Presets exist for up to 5 sec of plain old stereo looping, or 10 sec mono. With several MIDI pedals or a volume pedal and an expression pedal, you can easily control feedback and input. These are built up using series-arranged basic delay blocks that each max out at 660ms, but whose parameters have been thoughtfully ganged on simple menu pages, so you can use a single control for all of them. A 10-sec. delay uses less than half the available dsp resources, so you can still process your loop in-house. The unexpanded GTR is a very rich delay machine, with many flavors of plain, multitap, filtered and mod delays. It's not too tricky to add and connect up delay units within existing presets, so you don't have to build from scratch if you just want longer delay times in an otherwise cool preset, and don't mind clumsy, automatically-created menus. But woe if you want to create a feedback parameter when there is none (surprisingly frequent), and then want a pedal to control it. Once you add the Alchemy card and chip ($400), it gets much better, since you can now tap tempos and you'll find, for instance, a very powerful delay structure for rhythmic looping called Combtaps, which is four 660ms blocks in a feedback loop (you can choose which block is the feedback tap), each with adjustable resonance, which allows you to set up many different patterns of these delay taps (using delay times), each with a distinct timbre, level and pan position that will loop without losing the pattern...much less elegant and friendly than the Korg DL8000's slightly less flexible but much longer cross-delay/multi-tap version of the same idea, which has rhythm-pattern presets...but if you've got the time and the training, you could use this algorithm to build something even cooler on the 4000, with BPM displays and look-up tables for certain patterns. You could probably also build your own CombTaps or something similar without Alchemy......beyond me, I'm sorry to say. With Alchemy and a sampling card: Here are a few Preset descriptions: My comments in (): 1.TAPTEMPOLOOP xfade (means that it could be audio-faded in or out at a preset rate with any other patch that also uses less that half the available dsp/memory) Simple TapTempo loop. You may start and stop the counter at will. MOD1 is a volume pedal to the loop input. All these loops have a <Door> param - this is the level of source input to the loop. They also have integral volume pedals before this door. In general, with all the looping presets, any changes made to the delay time will be less prone to artifacts if entered via the keypad. Stereo in, Stereo out. 3. MEMNOSENE 1 xfade TapTempo Loop with multiply and skew. This flavor of loop manipulation lets you multiply the loop length. For best results, after you TT the length, let the loop repeat two or three times, prior to doing a multiply. Note that if <Multi> is set to one, each <count> will add to the loop a duration equal to the original length. Also beware of large <Skew> values to start with, as this is subtracted from the loop length and may clip off your source. Again the skew param should not be "spun' but keyed in. Stereo in and out. 6. MEMNOSENE crystals--#3 with "Crystal echos" ( a cool pitch-shift preset) 8. BPM LOOP psycholev This version of "BPM LOOP..." adds stereo mod delays, set here with aggessive feedback. Stereo in and out. 12. BPM DNA LOOP xfade This BPM loop has two mono loops, each with independant input levels. Stereo in and out. 15. TT BPM LOOP xfade Tap the tempo in 1/4 notes which gives BPM. This is multiplied by 4 to give BARS. You may then set the number of bars to get loop length. Stereo in, out. 16. TT BPM LOOP verb...adds a reverb. Tempting, what? dpc