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A lot of people who loop don't use pre-recorded loops, they make them on the spot. When the EDP was first introduced, memory was really, really expensive (around $800 for 16MB--that's MEGAbytes, not Terabtyes), and neither USB nor Firewire had been invented yet, so there weren't cheap high-speed storage technologies available for musical gear. Keyboardists were lugging around Zip disks and big, slow SCSI drives. The EDP has tons of performance-oriented features that have been developed over several versions of the software which make it really good for improv style looping, and less so for band-minus-one type applications, which is where the JamMan pedal really shines. TH On Sat, Mar 7, 2009 at 5:49 AM, Rhod Evans <rhodhebrides@yahoo.co.uk> wrote: > Then I discovered the Jamman, and that seems ideal - pre-record drum and > bass loops in LIVE, download to the Jamman, then on stage play and record > rhythm guitar verse/chorus whilst singing over the top of it, then loop >and > play lead guitar, harmonica or whatever and sing over the top of it. > > However I notice that most of you seem to prefer the Echoplex. Am I >missing > something here? As far as I can tell the Echoplex doesn't have the >ability > to download pre-recorded loops (no way of storing them?) so I would be > severely at a disadvantage - how it be possible to get 3 sets worth of > prepared music onto it? I'm not worried about the cost - it's more > important that I get the right kit, as I have gigs waiting.