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I believe the most important philosophical question is "effects before or after the looper?" Of course, the best way is to have both, like in my big hardware setup (http://moinlabs.de/images/MS02.jpg) or in my laptop-based setup, where effects can be placed both after and before the looper. The choice has usually to be made in smaller, pedalboard-style/mixer-free setups (like in my small instrument into Zoom G2.1u into Boss DD20, sometimes with a Korg KP3 trailing that setup). In that setup, I make a lot of use of the Zoom's internal effect, but also can use the KP3's effects (if present) after the looper. However, a post-looper effect here will automatically affect both loop and instrument signal. Generally, the advantage of effect pre-looper: * you can make use of the looper effecting the effects (like in a reverse loop having the reverb happening before the signal) * you can "free up" your effects after it has been mixed-down to the loop The advantage of effect post-looper: * in modulated effects, the modulation is always confined to the loop's timing, whereas e.g. a step-sequencer controlled filter can have another loop duration if it comes after the loop and thus sound different everytime the loop comes around. * you can change the effects processing of a static loop during the performance. A good alternative is using a looper like e.g. the Repeater which has an effects insert, where you can choose to have the effect work on the input signal or on the loops. But if I only have one effect available and don't have a looper with an insert, I also will always put the effect pre-looper. If I have more than one effect, at least one will be after the looper. Rainer ----- original Nachricht -------- Betreff: Re:How do you chain your Effects? Gesendet: Di, 11. Dez 2007 Von: Sjaak<tcplugin@scarlet.be> > > how do you actually chain your effects? > > My setup: Instruments -> Mixer -> Delay/FX -> Looper -> PA. Volume and FX > levels are changed using a midi controller, the mixer settings don't >change