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Hi. One thing I found recently (it is used, but in almost mint condition) is an old(?) AKAI midi programmable audio patch bay. A friend of mine uses one of them and he is really glad of this unit. I think it is called MP80, but I'm not really sure of it. I think I'll buy it just to use with my mixer, as my Behringer has only two sends, and I already use both of them. I have recently bought a Digitech Studio Twin (I think its name is tsr24), and I found I didn't know where to patch it, as I already have an akai headrush that goes into a Boss vf-1 on a send and an edp that goes into a Korg A1 on the other one, but it was damn cheap, it has some great reverbs and delays, so I had to get one. And I use all the four groups on my mixer for multitrack recording, so a patch bay should be the only solution (without changing the mixer, obviously). Peace Luigi P.S. I'm going to London in a week or two. Anyone knows of some good concerts there (involving looping, obviously...)? ----- Original Message ----- From: Michael LaMeyer <mlameyer@rcn.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 8:28 PM Subject: Re: Audio routing > If you happen to have a grand or two to throw at this, you might > want to look into the Sound Sculpture matrix routing gear: > > http://www.soundsculpture.com/sculpt3.htm > > The nice thing is that they're programmable, so you wouldn't > need to manually tweak your aux sends on your mixer to change > your effects routing, you could use a footcontroller or > something instead and leave your hands free to play. > > (thinking about selling the car for one myself ...) > > MIDI controllable rack mixers/aux expanders might work too for > cheaper. Don't know of any offhand. Anyone know of cheaper > alternatives to the Switchblade products? > > Thanks, > > Mike > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "M. Steven Ginn" <sginn@airmail.net> > To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> > Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 2:20 PM > Subject: RE: Audio routing > > > > Thanks Luca for the response. > > > > I have checked the archives, but I guess I am not using the > search > > engine properly to return what I am looking for. > > > > Regards, > > Steve > > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > > From: luca [mailto:lucafeed@tin.it] > > > Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:13 PM > > > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > > > Subject: R: Audio routing > > > > > > Steve, you can see a lot of different set ups in the > archive. > > > the thing it seems everyone is trying to do is put the > looper in a > > > position > > > that allows it to record processed sounds, but also to > process the > > loop > > > itself when it's been recorded. > > > you can use aux sends to feed its input and make its out > come in > > through a > > > channel strip. > > > you can put other effects on the other auxes (making them > come back in > > the > > > mix through channels, not with the aux returns). > > > the more auxes a mixer have the best it is for this topic, > also they > > > should > > > be pre-fader ones. > > > when you have just a few auxes you can find help with the > alt. strips > > (the > > > ones you usually use for a multitracker recorder, also > called > > "groups"). > > > anyway, take a piece of paper, a pen and a bunch of short > cables and > > have > > > fun, audio routing is a very fascinating thing to loose your > head with > > and > > > it affects your style very much. (the best it would be let > your style > > > affect > > > the audio routing) > > > my best, > > > luca > > > > >