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Mini Disk 4our track decks have all these features and you can get them for next to nothing now. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Daryl" <highhorse@mhorse.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 5:14 PM Subject: cassette looping electronics help > > I'm continuing to explore the possibilites of cassette-based looping, using > four-track machines, and I'm thrilled with it thus far. I've bought a >3rd cheap > four-track and am having great fun doing things like moving a loop from one > machine to another, each time recording it at normal speed then bumping >it up to > double-speed (a perfect octave shift). > > There are a few things that a typical four-track won't allow me to do though. > Doing sound-on-sound on a particular would be terrific: I'm doing this in a > primitive manner already through modifying cassette cases so the tape never > passes over the erase head. This yields fantastic, evocative lo-fi soundscapes, > but the problem is that I'm unable to hear the track until I punch out of > record. > > It seems like there are some pretty electronics-handy folks here (I'm an eager > beginner myself, done lots of soldering but no sophisticated mods). Anyone have > any ideas? what I want specifically is: > > - to selectively disable the erase function when in record (doesn't have to be > per track, just universal) > - to allow monitoring of playback while recording on the same track > > I'd also like to extend the range of pitch speed. Would messing with the value > of the pitch pot accomplish this? > > Daryl Shawn > highhorse@mhorse.com >