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Thats correct,thanks Stephen, for clearing that up. Bill -----Original Message----- From: S V G [mailto:vsyevolod@yahoo.com] Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 1:31 PM To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com Subject: Re: Repeater Mod Bill wrote: > You have got to hit multiply on the down beat of a loop or else it will >do the slow down ramp up thing, I feel your pain, but I've gotten more accurate and am having less problems. Zoe replied: > Ah...now that is interesting. It happens to me mid-song. Often I record onto only a portion of a going loop (for example, record onto beats 4 and 5 of a 6 beat phrase, or just on and upbeat). For example, a loop is going, I'm playing a phrase on top and sample just a couple portions of that phrase mid-bar. So should I always record a full multiple of the original loop?>> Zoe: I think Bill is talking about hitting the "Multiply" button, not just inserting more audio into an existing loop. It's a great discovery that Bill tells us about, though I don't think that you're referring to the same thing here. Since you're using the FCB1010, it may be that it's sending extra MIDI stuff. Or possibly that the Repeater is freaking out from the MIDI commands regardless of their pristine nature. Zoe continues: << Also, shouldn't matter I guess, but I always start my loops on an upbeat (i.e. the AND of 4). Besides feeling more logical to me, then the beginning of the downbeat sounds natural. It's like the upswing/breath that a quartet takes or a conductor gives before starting a piece.>> Ah, this is great as well. I never thought about it that way, but it makes marvelous sense to start a loop on an upbeat. I like your breath analogy. Stephen __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com