By 6/8 Stanley
Sun Apr 07, 2019 11:17 pm
By environmental I mean something that's not sampled from a musical work, like birds, traffic noises, musicians tuning up, or a noisy water heater.
Using JJOS128XL v2.01 but I don't think it matters for this so I posted in "getting started".
Using destructive chops because that section comes first in my book "JJOSXL Sampling Bible, so maybe it's easier.
I read several sources today that say the sample should be sliced in a multiple of the beats per bar of the original, like 8, 16, or 32 for a sample in 4/4. Dunno why but I'd guess it has to do with looping or being able to count the beats. Figuring out the water heater's beat would probably crash any beat-detecting software or make Einstein pull his hair out.
Chopped my 3 minute plus sample into 32 and 16 slices, which put slices on all the A bank pads. Nice. But I want this beat in 12/8 (or an even number of 6/8 bars). Do I need to chop the sample into 12, 24, or 36 slices to make 12/8 rhythms with it, or does it even matter ? Not understanding something basic. Googled it but nothing, so probably a non-issue except for beginners.
Using JJOS128XL v2.01 but I don't think it matters for this so I posted in "getting started".
Using destructive chops because that section comes first in my book "JJOSXL Sampling Bible, so maybe it's easier.
I read several sources today that say the sample should be sliced in a multiple of the beats per bar of the original, like 8, 16, or 32 for a sample in 4/4. Dunno why but I'd guess it has to do with looping or being able to count the beats. Figuring out the water heater's beat would probably crash any beat-detecting software or make Einstein pull his hair out.
Chopped my 3 minute plus sample into 32 and 16 slices, which put slices on all the A bank pads. Nice. But I want this beat in 12/8 (or an even number of 6/8 bars). Do I need to chop the sample into 12, 24, or 36 slices to make 12/8 rhythms with it, or does it even matter ? Not understanding something basic. Googled it but nothing, so probably a non-issue except for beginners.