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Hi Bill, yes this is the way ive done it in the past,however having the drum box separate fro the loopers mix is cool,i can reverse the EDPS loop while the machine goes forward,i can process the machine separately,fade it out while the loops are running,do the cool midi mute start etc. the EDP is awesome and perfectly tight,i have no problems with that,my point here is trying to do this all with software and upon comparing it,hardware is still the tightest when doing sponatenus loops EDP start,stop reverse,unrounded multiply,replace etc. i just set the EDP to "user start" and i can do all that crazy shit while i pause the drumbox and waits for me to restart it,then i can just multiply,do glitchy loops,replace,unround,then while the edp loop is running change a preset on the drumbox with a different groove and boom restart it, way fun baby! then sometimes if i want i resample the drum grooves from the adrenalinn or from the loaded drum grooves on my digitech into the EDP,and i can even stretch the tempo of the samples on it,thats a great feature on the jamman! After messing with both i made a decision,for this stuff ill stay with hardware,for non midi sync stuff or traveling ill use mobius. cant always get what u want cheers Luis On Sat, Jan 29, 2011 at 6:53 PM, William Walker <billwalker@baymoon.com> wrote: > Dear Luis et all, I think that my old band mate and looper Gary Regina ( >and > the Genie for that matter) has the coolest and easiest way to get great >drum > beats without resorting to midi clock, drum machines or sequencers, >software > etc... Simple resampling, like I think you are now on to Luis, You have >this > great new looper that stores a huge amount of loops so use it as your >beat > loop storage device, and if you can't sync to anything, simply resample > those beats on to your edp for further mangling, perfect stops and starts > etc. Gary does it on an RC 50, before that it was a original Lexicon >Jamman. > That cool thing about this is obviously you can sample anything from your > favorite hip grooves and dance tracks, to Martin Luther King throwing >down > his Dream, and if you don't have a looper with storage, an I-pod or CD > player routed to your looper will suffice, and from a visual standpoint > resampling a drum groove live still gives an audience the sense of the >piece > being built from scratch as apposed to pressing a button to turn on the > canned tracks. > Bill > >