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Hey gang. The recent OT thread of "finding new ways of using your current equipment instead of giving in to the 'I'll be great when I can afford a VG-8/EDP/Kyma/etc'-neurosis" inspired me to get busy with my 2 DOD DFX4 pedals instead of staring at my calendar waiting for the Repeater to go into production. Not surprisingly, I found a few new tricks! If you've got 2 cheap samplers, try these: - set one sampler to a short loop length and the other to a longer length. Then play something into 'em and set them up to repeat. Then slow the short one down so it's an octave below the longer one. It should sound very different then it did at the original length, and hopefully super-cool. For extra kicks, try messing with the length of the other loop too. For instance, try getting them a major second or sixth apart for some interestingly-consonant sounds. Obviously this only works if you've got a sampler that changes the loop's pitch when you adjust its length. - open the loop, play a note into it and sustain the note while twisting and turning the knob that controls the delay length, then close the loop. You should end up with some multi-octave whammy dives that would make Adrian Belew jealous (though I'm pretty sure he did the same trick back in the 80s on some King Crimson or Talking Heads tune). - try stringing 2 samplers together. On my Boss GT3 (get one!), I set up a patch with a 1-second delay with infinite layering. I like to build up a densely-packed loop, then dump it over to the DFX all at once. Then clear out the 1-second delay and do it all over again. Since the DFX can only hold a few layers at a time, this is sort of a cheating way to stuff it with much more than it could normally handle. - set the 2 samplers for sample times that are close, but not quite the same, say 4 seconds vs 3.25 seconds. Then play some ambient volume-swell stuff into both of them at the same time. The slight difference in the delay times will cause the two loops to go in and out of sync in a very nice manner. Sorry if these ideas might be too specific to devices that work like the ever-wonderful DOD DFX4, but hopefully someone might get inspired. Besides, we haven't talked much about looping lately! Peter