![]() ![]() It also supports something that is fantastic for a not-very-talented musician: Retrospective Recordingġ) Empty loops can just be "listening" while you're noodling along, and when you say to yourself "wow, I really liked that last bit", tap a loop and it perfectly grabs the last 2, 4, 8 bars, or whatever you've configured. When I add more stuff, they may be good enough, or I may choose to upgrade them. Loopy Pro is perfect for this, since I can get various loops going and not fret about the fact that they're not perfect. I tend to iterate on ideas - sketch something out with a scratch drum track, rough chords, then refine each section over time. I'm not a "looper" by any stretch, but it's almost exactly what I've wanted for a music making workflow. No, just one.I've been spending a fair bit of my Christmas break learning Loopy Pro in the context of a modular. So on that first donut, are there 3 loops? It looked like you recorded once and modified the loop, then recorded twice more on top of that loop, before moving onto the bass bit on another donut and the twiddly bit on another? So on that first donut, are there 3 loops? It looked like you recorded once and modified the loop, then recorded twice more on top of that loop, before moving onto the bass bit on another donut and the twiddly bit on said: I created three different loops using the same input. ![]() The last two used retro said:Īctually, i didn’t overdub. I’m really new to how this looping thing works so it’s great to see other people’s workflow.Īctually, i didn’t overdub. I’m really new to how this looping thing works so it’s great to see other people’s said: Anyhoo, lots of options for beginner and expert loopers.Īny reason why you overdubbed on the first loop rather than doing a new donut each time? (I think that’s what you did?) You can set retro looping as a default in the settings which gives you one added benefit: you can see the loop wave form in the doughnut which gives you a visual representation of the retro looping process. This is a neat trick i learned from the beta test: you can set a gesture for the retro looper so that you can mix/match go forward looping (as usual, with a tap) with retro looping (any gesture you select). I played until i heard what i liked and then swiped down on the loop. Anyhoo, lots of options for beginner and expert said:įinally, the second and third loops use the retrospective looper. I do have brusfri loaded on the input.įinally, the second and third loops use the retrospective looper. At least it’ll give some ideas for how flexible the fx routing is and how you could do some gee whizzz live looping. Note that I could have put the Drambo pitch shifter on the input to hear the bass effect on the second loop but i was lazy and just assigned the effect to the blue color group. This is just my acoustic plugged directly into an audio interface and routed into Loopy Pro. I’ve been looping for a while so I have a pretty good handle on it but the feature to capture the first loop will certainly help a beginner as shown in this video (which is a waltz to show how the algo works, as well). OK, there will be following videos that show Loopy’s depth but I attempt in this video to address the use case that came up a few pages back around the beginner looper. I think many of us like to live vicariously through the experiences of the testers. It feels like there was more chatter before the beta dropped than there is now, and I miss that. I’m in favor of more chatter around Loopy Pro beta testing. There was an attempt to cross-post to an announcements-only thread, but that died off. Ultimately the majority decided they liked the sometimes-excessive chatter. There was a similar debate earlier this year on the 2021 iOS App Sales and Discussion thread. Someone asked about the retrospective looping earlier so maybe we can knock out a video on that. Maybe we can find middle ground and post videos and hype type stuff but keep the beta chatter to slack (which is basically what happened so no big deal). It's also neat to see the workings of the good beta testers and how they come up with test scenarios and use cases. Obviously adhere to all, if there are any, NDA restrictions, but I love seeing what people are trying and how Loopy Pro is shaping up. ![]()
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