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Loneliness is replying to your own online postings > I've just discovered something interesting on the Echoplex that I want to > share with the other EDP users on this list. This has to do with the > multiply function. What I've discovered is that I can end the multiply > function by hitting insert and then immediately return to the multiply > function to generate a blues progression rather elegantly. However, some of > the subsequent behavior is puzzling me, so I want to give this specific > example. FYI, I have quantize on. > The song I am constructing is a blues. I play a figure for the first > phrase, the "I" chord, which is one bar in length. I allow it to play >one > additional time (now playing bar 2). I hit multiply, and the "song" begins. > After the fourth cycle begins and bar 4 of the "song" is playing, I hit > insert and when bar 5 begins, I am in insert mode and I play the "IV" chord > for two bars. Around bar 6 or so I hit multiply again and when bar 7 > arrives, I am treated to two bars of "I", as created by the original > multiply. I allow this to continue through bar 8--I press insert during bar > 8, and when bar 9 arrives, I play the "V" chord for two bars, pressing > multiply during bar 10. When bar 10 arrives, it again delivers two bars of > "I", and during bar 12 I hit either multiply or record. This completes the > "song" in 12 bars. This is what I discovered. > Now to the part I don't fully understand. Let's alter the chord > progression. We start with the same figure for the first phrase, the "I" > chord, which is one bar in length. I allow it to play one additional >time > (now playing bar 2). I hit multiply, and the "song" begins. After the > second cycle begins and bar 2 of the "song" is playing, I hit insert and > when bar 3 begins, I am in insert mode and I play the "IV" chord for two > bars. Around bar 4 or so I hit multiply again and when bar 5 arrives, I am > treated to two bars of "I", as created by the original multiply. During bar > 6, I hit insert and play the "V" chord for two bars (bars 7 and 8). During > bar 8 I hit multiply. When bar 9 arrives, I expect two bars of the "I" > chord. Instead I am jarred by one bar of "I" and one bar of "IV". What > gives? Or to put it more clearly--with which cycle does the multiply begin? Well Gary, the answer is, cycle two--at least in bars 11 and 12 of the first example. Gee I wonder why? G PS--Viva El Puerco Espanol!