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On Tuesday, June 11, 2002, at 08:13 PM, Mark Hamburg wrote: > > I think there's probably also a big difference between playing a drum > machine and using a drum machine as an automated accompanist. As > someone who > is primarily worrying about guitar playing, I've been looking for > something > that strikes a nice middle ground between "start drum machine and let it > run" and "interact semi-constantly with the drum machine". > > Mark > > Here's what I've found works the best. Regardless of what people on the list have said, the Roland "Groove" boxes give you tons of stuff to tweak live. Bring drums in and out, switch patterns, add filters, effects, change BPM, ect. I've just sat and "DJ'd" with the MC-307 and it can be pretty fun when used in conjunction with something like a KAOSS pad or AirFX. One problem. I find that the amount of attention I need to pay to the box to make it sound not canned (as opposed to not machine like) is more than I like to give it while I'm playing the guitar. So... the compromise I've come up with is to automate a "song" of changes. Sequence out a long pattern. Then, do my loop schpiel. When I'm inspired to play the drum machine, it's there and tweakable. However, if I forget about it, it won't linger on the same unchanging pattern either. It's also kind of nice to have a bit of a random change happen. I'd like to find someone in the SF Bay Area that's interested in this aspect of electronic music. Someone who doesn't play an instrument, per se, but would like to tweak drum machines, play samples, scratch. (would really love to find a DJ that can *really* scratch, I'm so tempted to buy that high end Pioneer CD player and do some myself!) Mark Sottilaro