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Mark S. wrote: >Ye of little faith. The Repeater can do this easily >by Pitch shifting >the signal using a MIDI note number. > >Mark Sottilaro > >On Thursday, September 5, 2002, at 08:50 PM, Scott >Martin wrote: > >> Rainer wrote: >>> Say you've got a four-bar rock drum >>> groove on stereo pair 1+2 (recorded at home, >perhaps >>> from some original >>> source) and a i-iv-VI-V synth chord progression on >>> track 3 (recorded at home >>> with your Prophet or during performance from one of >>> your synths). You could >>> then reorder the synth chord progression to V-iv-i->i >> >> OK, I'm perfectly willing to believe that I'm just a >> Repeater OS moron, but HOW, exactly, would one >> accomplish this manipulation in real time? I can >> understand how the more advanced editing functions >on >> the EDP could pull this off, but I can't wrap my >brain >> around the sequence needed to nail it on the >Repeater. Um, I can understand if the loop was being shifted from i-iv-VI-V to, say, v-i-III-II, which pitch shifts all 4 chords the same distance, but what Rainer specified is a change from i-iv-VI-V to V-iv-i-i. Either he mistyped, or he's got some secret editing trick that I don't know about. Even if he pitch shifted each chord separately using a MIDI controller, you can't use pitch shifting to change a i chord (Em, for example) to a V chord (Bmaj). Other ideas? Later, Scott ===== Scott Martin coirbidh_99@yahoo.com You can't make me think like you, mundane -Incubus __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Finance - Get real-time stock quotes http://finance.yahoo.com