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You miss the point (Mark begins crusade) a saved "static" loop isn't what I'm talking about. I'm talking about the ability to record what you are playing live (quite unlike a sequenced MIDI loop) Save it to a new loop, continue fade/adding to your loop for hours if need be, then going back to your original saved loop, but now have it play back synched to a totally different tempo. Mark Sottilaro On Sunday, September 30, 2001, at 07:01 PM, David Myers wrote: > It has become clear, following this list over years, that loopers seem > to be > of two minds. The Acid guys and the EDP guys are really two completely > separate camps. Those of us on "Kim's side" can't understand the > desire to > save a loop; a never-changing loop just isn't the living thing that an > evolving loop is. I equate the static loop with MIDI music, which is a > spitting out of notes and sounds on command. Not to discredit that > approach, but I feel that it's a very different animal. Not looking to > start a holy war here, but there is a very strict division between these > mindsets, and I think we should recognize this. Could it actually call > for > two separate lists? > > David Lee Myers > > on 9/30/01 4:31 PM, Kim Flint at kflint@loopers-delight.com wrote: > >> With a performance oriented looper like the Echoplex, the whole >> feature set >> is based around the idea of being able to build, manipulate, and evolve >> loops freely while performing. If all you do with it in performance is >> make >> static, unchanging loops, you are almost missing the point. >