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wow man thanx for the explanation Rainer,ive always hear of the Kaos pad thorugh this list in fact but never thought how powerful it is,guess i never saw such performances with it used to the max, pretty nifty! www.myspace.com/luisangulocom --- Rainer Straschill <moinsound@googlemail.com> schrieb am Fr, 23.10.2009: > Von: Rainer Straschill <moinsound@googlemail.com> > Betreff: re: beardyman > An: loopers-delight@loopers-delight.com > Datum: Freitag, 23. Oktober 2009, 12:48 > Luis said: > > allright guys sio how in hell is this guy doing this? > > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OKhxifzgSuk > > The KP3 Kaoss Pad (of which he has 4) basically offers two > functionalities at once: loop samples and effects. One > important fact > I'm pointing out right at the beginning is that for the > loops (and for > a lot of the effects), the tempo (set by tapping, selecting > a bpm or > syncing to MIDI) is a prerequisite. > > 1. Loop Samples: > There's a total of four loop samples available in memory, > accessed by > the buttons below (as in player's view) the touch pad. If > you hit the > sample button, you first set the sample length (as 1,2,4,8 > or 16 > beats), then you hit the sample button to sample into that > slot. Then, > it samples the input signal. Or, you can hit "Resample" (by > hitting > shift+sample), in which case it samples the output (which > contains the > input signal+running samples, both of them through the > effects > section). > For each sample, you can: adjust sample volume, turn off > parts of the > sample (in divisions of 1/8, which will then be skipped), > and switch > between gating/running/mute/restart modes. > > 2. Effects: > Basically, you have a heap of effects, each of which has > two > parameters (controllable via the touchpad) and which affect > both the > input signal (which is always audible) and the samples. > Normally, if > you remove your hand from the touchpad, the effect will be > turned off > (but you can "hold" the last position or even record and > play back > your finger movements on the pad). Also, there's an FX > trail feature > which will fade effects in a delay when you release the pad > to make > the change less abrupt. > > As for it being "quite advanced" (to quote you): the KP3 > works really > well if you a) got at least one hand free, b) work in a > preset tempo, > c) don't need loops which are longer than four measures, d) > don't want > to do anything odd (e.g. odd meters, tempo changes, decide > when the > loop is going to end after starting the recording etc.). In > other > words: it's great for a DJ or beatboxer doing electronic > dance music > (the former being the original target market of the Kaoss > series). > > Rainer > >