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At 02:19 PM 9/13/2001, Per Boysen wrote: > > -----Ursprungligt meddelande----- > > Robert van der Kamp > > Am I correct that when changing the pitch of a given track, its > > speed does not change? > >Yes, that's correct. And the other way around; if you change speed the >track >does not change pitch. > > > Supose I want 'real' slomo, changing both the speed and pitch > > of all 4 tracks, and the Repeater is synced to an external clock, > > what would I do to get this done? > >Try bringing down the tempo of that external clock. But Repeater does not >change tempo on the spot, it kind of slows down over a couple of beats. What Robert is looking for is an effect like tape speed change, or delay time change on old delays, where changing the speed *does* change the pitch. Among Loopers, that effect has always been see as a good and desireable thing, while among remix artists it is apparently a bad thing. (I assume that is why the repeater doesn't work that way?) So no, the repeater does not do the tape speed slow down effect. Speed and pitch change are independent. You could probably rig up a midi continuous controller setup where two midi cc messages were sent at the same time to control both pitch and time. (I haven't tried this, so I don't know if it works or how much it sounds like a real slow-down effect.) With real tape speed or delay time slow downs you don't get artifacts in the audio. with sustained sounds in the repeater, you get artifacts when you time stretc. I have experienced that with long sustained chords the speed correction causes artifacts after 5-10BPM of change. Some of you probably want those artifacts, so it is good I guess. If you weren't expecting it, you'll probably find it annoying. kim ______________________________________________________________________ Kim Flint | Looper's Delight kflint@loopers-delight.com | http://www.loopers-delight.com