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Re: loop deconstruction with Repeater



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

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