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Re: Undo Problem in Loop IV?







----Original Message Follows----
From: Matthias Grob <matthias@grob.org>
Reply-To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com
To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com
Subject: Re: Undo Problem in Loop IV?
Date: Sun, 2 Mar 2003 19:06:49 -0300

>HI, Do any of you know about a problem undoing a 'layer' of music from 
>ALL 
>cycles after a multiply has been done?  A long press of UNDO erases the 
>newest layer from all cycles EXCEPT the first one! (My memory is at max.)
>Here is a simple example:
>1. RECORD a drum beat for a few measures. Say it is 4 seconds long.
>2.  MULTIPLY a guitar line over it.    Play and record the guitar through 
>4 
>cycles, so that the resulting loop is now 16 seconds long (4seconds X  
>4cycles).
>3 UNDO -   Do a 'long' press, and the guitar part, played over all 4 
>cycles 
>is now gone,  EXCEPT for the part existing during the first cycle.
>4.  Short presses do not help and also, there are similar examples to the 
>above where the UNDO function is not even available at all, at any time.
>
>IS THIS A BUG??   I did not have this problem using the Loop III V.5 
>which 
>i am about to reinstall to make this sucker work!
>Thank you for any of your answers - Patty in SF

No, its not a bug, but when you use Multiply immediately (without doing 
some 
Overdub or FB reduction) after Record, you get a problem really.

Just imagine how the sound is kept in memory:
This is my current conclusion about a work around:  (copied from a note to 
Kim)

"Yes, it seems to work by turning the feedback knob slightly once during 
each repeat of the original single cycle, for one times less than the 
intended multiply.  Then, doing the 'real' multiply.    Lots of work, just 
to get back to the original cycle!    Oh well, at least in live 
performance 
cases where i need to build up the layers, then scale it back down to the 
fundamental cycle (for working with dancers in this case) i think i can 
use 
this trick."
Thanks to Mathias and Kim,
Patty


You have one cycle recorded and we keep coping that to another cycle, 
ready 
to register eventual changes. As long as you dont do anything more, we 
just 
alternate between those two copies.
Now you do Multiply, which copies one of those cycles (depends on when you 
press Multiply exactly) 4 times with your new overdubs. So you have 5 or 6 
cycles in the memory now.
Now you want undo all overdubs. But we dont have 4 subsequent cycles 
without 
overdubs in the memory!

So the solution is:
Multiply by 1 (press Multiply twice in a row) at the beginning of the 4 
cycles
Then press Undo to get rid of the overdub on that cycle
--


          ---> http://Matthias.Grob.org



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