Support |
Greetings:
For any of you who use a DOD D12, I discovered a flaw that I
have been able to use to my advantage. Forgive me if this is common knowledge.
I use the delay mode almost exclusively for looping (the
sampler sucks). I had the delay time set to 12 seconds and the looping button
engaged which allows for playing over the top of recorded loops without adding
additional recording. As I was looping, I accidentally hit the Mix dial which
balances the direct signal with the delay signal. I bumped the mix all the way
to the right (nothing audible but delay signal). The suddeness of the bump
caused a slight delay time variation in the recorded loop, thus giving it a
tonal wobble that was now permanently part of the loop. At first, I was pissed
off because I was really digging the loop I was working on. However, I realized
that by rapidly "jiggling" the mix dial, I could make some cool distortions in
the loop, kind of like an irratic LFO wave. The D12 does have an effect mode
that does some generic manipulation but this manual "jiggling" is a bit more
quirky and fun. As some may know, the D12 is definitely the low-budget looping
tool in comparison to an EDP or Jamman. However, sometimes the faults of the
cheaper toys can be blessings in disguise.
Regards,
Alan
Imberg |