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excellent breakdown of the facts of drummers with loops Rick, thanks... I agree with all of that I would add Scenario C because I don't like having my rhythm gtr be the time keeper. Allow me to explain. When I play rhythm guitar with a drummer in a groove oriented band with no looper, the drummer is, of course, the time keeper and I am usually somewhat behind the drums on purpose, for grooviness, you know like on everyone's favorite soul music records. That's just how I feel it. So, for my rhythm guitar to be the time keeper with the drummer following always sounds odd to me. That's why I use a click, that the audience doesn't hear, to keep the beat. In my experience, that frees up the loopist from being the time keeper and can lead to a much more authentic groove... by authentic I mean, closer to what a gtr player playing with a drummer being the time keeper with no looper or click would feel like. The purpose of my post was to ask everyone if they knew a better technical way to feed a click to the drummer. I've been using the RC-50 for a while now and it's been fun, but I want more possibilities from the looper side of things. Is there a piece of gear that is not an RC-50 or a laptop that will do this (I already know how to do it with either of those things). Maybe the LP-1? thanks for chiming in everyone, very interesting posts. On Apr 3, 2012, at 2:50 PM, Rick Walker wrote: > This is an interesting topic that I"ve given considerable time to in my > own life as a professional drummer > and a live looping artist. > > I love playing to loops. I consider it a unique timely challenge to be > able to do so rather than being > a 'slave' to the loop. It's difficult to do and not every drummer has > the timing skills required to > play to a loop. > > That said, there are several things that have to happen for this to > work in two distinctly different scenarios: > > A) Where the drummer is supposed to play continuously to a an already > established melodic loop > > 1) the drummer has to have really good monitoring of the loop. > That's a bottom line. > > 2) also, frequently, an instrumentalist will lay a rhythm loop down > and then proceed to overdub on the > loop which causes timbral masking and makes it exceedingly difficult > for a percussionist (or anyone) > to hear the foundational rhythm loop clearly enough. > > 3) towards this end, I think it's excellent for the drummer to have > their own monitor whose volume they can control > in the middle of the gig, themselves. This monitor works best if > it receives ONLY the loop that is foundational > This can be tricky depending on who is sending them the loop, but a > loop selector pedal is really a great tool > for directing a loop to the drummers monitor. > > 4) a drummer who has not experienced this kind of situation HAS to > practice synchronizing in such a scenario. > Don't expect an inexperienced drummer to be able to do this the > first time. It wont' happen and you'll get > musical drift. > > In the case of multi-tracking loop setups, I recommend that the first > loop (rhythm loop) be sent to one > channel and then sent on to the drummers' monitor. In the LP-1, as an > example, you can route a loop to an AUX channel out that only goes to > the drummer/percussionist for audible loop synchronization. I believe > Ablteton's > Live and Mobius can also be routed similarly.