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That would work as you described but it takes a longer to build the music bed in front of a live audience. If there were A/B/C sections to the tunes and 10-15 tunes per set, the process of building the song would get 'musically tiresome'. Also, if the loop could be of varying lengths, I could imagine it being a more natural form of entry because I think in terms of repeating phrases for each part and not thinking which of the loops is the longest and adjust from there. > -----Original Message----- > From: Seth Elgart [mailto:selgart@earthlink.net] > Sent: Friday, June 02, 2006 7:03 AM > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > Subject: Re: RC-50: Multiply feature? (overdubbing w/ different lengths) > > At 6:53 AM -0700 6/1/06, Buzap wrote: > >If I record a sample ("phrase") and go into overdub, > >does that mean I have to stick to the initial phrase > >length no matter what? > >I wanted to do this: record 1 bar, then overdub > >2-bar-pattern, then overdub 4-bar-pattern etc. > >Is there a reasonable way (like multiply) to do this? > > Why not do it the old fashioned way, by playing it by hand? Play the > first one bar pattern through four times, then play the second two > bar pattern twice, then play the four bar pattern once. This way you > have three different length phrases, except that as far as the > looper's concerned they're all four bars. As long as you're not > playing sevens against eights or something this will work fine. You > could do that too if you're willing to play the patterns by hand > eight times and seven times respectively, and if the looper can > record a phrase of that length. On the other hand, if you want 11 > against 13, then you'll have to record 143 measures before they'll > line up again. > > In the late 80s/early 90s I was working on a "sound track" for a > play. I had a piece that was about 3.5 minutes long, with a > burbling-along arpeggio running throughout, but they wanted it to be > twice that because that's how long the scene was. For the original, I > simply played the four-note arpeggio eight times, then made that loop > (I was using Performer, or maybe a hardware digital sequencer). Very > simple. However, when we re-recorded that for the play, the studio > had only the one tape machine and no computers or other looping > devices. I had to sit there and play that dang arpeggio by hand for > seven minutes. It took me an hour of trying before I managed to play > it perfectly all the way through, and I had to throw everyone out of > the room to do it. The Human Sequencer. > > What was I talking about? Oh, yeah. The moral of this little story is > to not worry about the possible lack of functionality of the hardware > in question, but to simply play the different length patterns by > hand. <g> > > It'll work just fine. > > > > Seth