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yeah, i'd like to do the whole Live 8 & Max4Live upgrade from Live 6, but I just upgraded Logic Studio and I just don't have the bucks! If Live8 *included* M4L (and instruments as luscious as Logic Studio, and a great loop browser), it would be reasonable, but this is out of the park. It's very cool, but I think the Ableton stuff is very overpriced. On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 9:55 AM, Chris Sewell <lunamusic@mac.com> wrote: > If only it sounded as good as Mainstage. I love both, and am constantly > going back and forth. But I hope Ableton continues to develop Looper. >Per is > right, its sync abilities are rock solid. > > > On Nov 6, 2009, at 8:04 AM, Per Boysen wrote: > >> On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 1:45 PM, roger <roger@brecon.co.uk> wrote: >>> >>> Looper is set up for remote operation, so you can record, overdub, undo >>> and >>> more without touching the computer. >>> >>> Has anyone any experience of this. >> >> >> Yes, I did it for hours yesterday. Was coaching an artist that is >> going out to loop his album material plus live instrument using Live >> 8. >> >> Except for the feature your post mention you can also assign pedals to >> rate shift the loop. That means either transposing pitch one octave up >> and doubling the speed or transposing pitch one octave down and >> reducing speed to half the original tempo. If overdubbing new audio >> into the loop at those extremes the some interesting sound will come >> out when going back to normal speed/pitch. >> >> Another feature is that you can instantly divide or multiply the loop >> length by 2. It's not possible to divide or multiply by 3 or any other >> number than 2. When multiplied it simply gets longer by repeating the >> same chunk of original audio. When divided it cuts out half of the >> original audio and loops that. If repeating the division by two you >> can get down to very fast loops down in granular land where everything >> sounds like pneumatic manufacturing processes. >> >> "Reverse" is also possible. >> >> All these tricks you do to the loop in the Looper plug-in seems to >> happen according to the global quantization you run the host Live at. >> I did not test yesterday, but I think you should be able to create >> some interesting poly rhythm by jumping between different quantization >> settings while working the loop in the Looper plug-in. >> >> The most powerful feature that comes with the Looper plug-in is that >> you can set it to calculate the tempo from the first loop you make and >> then start the host Live as you close the loop. Before Live 8 this has >> not been possible in any other way than by using a Looper that sends >> out MIDI Clock that Live follows. This new system is more solid both >> in the way it sounds and in the meaning of not crashing or "loosing >> contact with master tempo clock" (hated that error message in pre 8 >> Live) >> >> Greetings from Sweden >> >> Per Boysen >> www.boysen.se >> www.perboysen.com >> > > -- Warren http://www.ubetoo.com/Artist.taf?_ArtistId=6679 http://www.warrensirota.com