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Thank you so much for the informative response- it really does make sense- simply make a loop, multiply it if you want to or not- then just use the loop copy function and play on top as the loop copy is recording new material as well into the next loop- sweet- Thanks Kim- Cliff ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kim Flint" <kflint@loopers-delight.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Sunday, September 03, 2000 12:43 AM Subject: Re: EDP Multiply question > At 9:12 PM -0700 9/2/00, Om_Audio wrote: > >Thanks- I was asking for fellow list member Rich who wants to play over top > >of the cycle as it gets multiplied 4x- then copy it to next loop and lay > >things on top of the second loop while maintaining a "clean" version in loop > >1- make sense? Thanks- > > > >Cliff > > ah, I see. That's easy to do anyway, and there is no need to multiply >your > clean original before you copy it to another loop! > > You see, LoopCopy of the audio is really just like doing a multiply, except > that it goes into a new loop. The copy process lets you create multiples > and overdub on top at the same time, just like Multiply. > > So rather than multiplying your "clean" version first in loop 1 with the > Multiply function and then copying that to loop 2, you simply start the > copy with the original when you are ready. It copies into Loop 2 in real > time, letting you add more material on top as it goes. If you let it keep > going, it adds multiples of the original until you tell it to stop, just > like the regular Multiply function. Then Loop 2 has as many multiples as > you like with your longer phrase on top, while loop 1 still has your > "clean" original. > > Here's a step-by-step, to be clear: > > 1. record a 1 bar loop in Loop 1. This is your "clean" original. In > EDP-speak, this is one "cycle". > > 2. let it loop away, while you play whatever you want along with it. > > 3. When you are ready to record the longer phrase, start the LoopCopy to > loop 2. > > 4. When the copy starts, you will see the Loop display saying 2 and the > timer counting up. The multiple display will be showing 1 at that point. > You will hear the Loop 1 audio continue to play seamlessly, although now it > is actually going into Loop 2. > > 5. Play your long phrase. Everything you play is being overdubbed on top > into Loop 2, along with the copied audio from loop 1. The new stuff and the > copied stuff are mixed together in real time for you, and recorded in >Loop > 2. > > 6. When the copying gets to the end of your original cycle, you will see > the Multiple display increment by 1, and the original cycle plays again. > You can keep on playing your longer thing, adding it to the loop in Loop 2. > Your original cycle is still being copied, for as many multiples of it as > you like. You can let it go for as long as you have memory. (all of that is > just as Multiply works). > > 7. When you've got as many multiples as you want, or you've finished the > longer phrase that is going on top, stop the copy. (you even do this by > pressing Multiply, to keep it familiar with the Multiply function.) > > 8. the Echoplex stops the copy into Loop 2, and immediately begins >playing > back that loop. You'll hear your original cycle repeating for how ever many > cycles you gave it, along with the longer thing you've added on top. > > 9. Loop 1 of course, is still your original "clean" cycle! Whenever you > want you can go back to that loop, and have the original cycle play. Now > you can easily switch between having the basic loop play clean, and the > multiplied loop with the longer phrase! It will sound just like you are > turning the longer phrase on and off. It's really a pseudo-multitrack > effect, except with a performance oriented interface. > > The important thing is, you accomplished all of that seamlessly, in > real-time, with very few button presses, and without any awkward waiting! > > > This is a bit of an advanced function on the echoplex, but once you get >it > there's a lot of power there. We reused concepts like Multiply for this for > a reason. We hope that people learn the basics of the Echoplex while > playing with the simpler functions as they start out. Then as they move >on > to deeper functions, they discover that they already know it! > > Similarly, there is time copy. This lets you copy the time base of one loop > into another, without the first loop's audio. This one is really just >like > Insert! I'll leave it to you to explore that one. > > Hope that helps, > kim > > ______________________________________________________________________ > Kim Flint | Looper's Delight > kflint@loopers-delight.com | http://www.loopers-delight.com > >