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Yet another is to have a kit, a bass, a keyboard, some percussion devices, a guitar and a mic and do it all yourself. Hmmm, Keller Williams? Respect Will Brake Soul Fruit Electronics -----Original Message----- From: Tim Nelson [mailto:psychle62@yahoo.com] Sent: Sunday, July 13, 2003 6:29 PM To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com Subject: Re: Drum loops...how do you do it? --- Paul Sanders <paul_sanders@adelphia.net> wrote: > How would you guys approach this? I want to be able > to tap out rhythms if I > want to, but I want to be able to have the midi > clock output so my looper > can sync to it. You could combine approaches: use a drum machine for extremely simple parts (just kick, maybe) and play your fills live into the loop. That way, you've got midi tempo *with* the live performance aspect of playing the drum parts. I used to do something similar on demo recordings 10-15 years ago: my drumming was sloppy, but the drum machine I had at the time sounded stiff and mechanical. By assigning simple steady parts to the machine, and playing the 'Keith Moon' parts manually, the end result was quite interesting. -t- __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? SBC Yahoo! DSL - Now only $29.95 per month! http://sbc.yahoo.com