Jerbo
New To The Game
Posts: 3
|
Post by Jerbo on Oct 13, 2004 23:40:48 GMT -5
currently mt method is taking a sample then sampling the sample in to smaller parts and assigning each sound to a key. this is proving to be real tedious is there an easier way or diffrent method 2 this
|
|
dextah
New To The Game
Posts: 1
|
Post by dextah on Oct 14, 2004 3:08:32 GMT -5
just copy the wave sample a few times..truncate when needed to make room...or if your sample is the exact length you need ...copy params only.....
|
|
Tal
New To The Game
diggin in the crates and bangin on the keys
Posts: 11
|
Post by Tal on Oct 14, 2004 13:25:37 GMT -5
I do it like this. Sample what you want into the first instrument. Then create a new instrument. and then create as many layers as you need in the new instrument and set key ranges. Then copy original sample from first sample instrument into the new instrument in every layer. you already have it layered across the zones. now set the sample zones where needed.
|
|
|
Post by tbiggz on Oct 19, 2004 20:55:42 GMT -5
Jerbo: yeah, you don't need to resample, just copy params.
Tal: ^^Why do you create all those layers? I never do that unless I need to layer. Is there an advantage to that (performance, patch keys etc...)
|
|
MADt
Beat Maker
Posts: 33
|
Post by MADt on Oct 20, 2004 19:33:48 GMT -5
yep....copy wave parameters, so you don't end up with copies of wav files. Multiple layers are not necessary. You can do it all on one. I used to do multiple layers when I didn't know what I was doing.
|
|