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-----Original Message----- From: Kim Flint <kflint@loopers-delight.com> >In the case of the Repeater, I actually own two of them, [snip] I'm curious as to what application you have that requires two Repeaters. (An eight track Repeater?) Or perhaps you need one in a permanent installation ([home] studio) and one that is mobile? >[snip] ...I do think the looping market is really confused about >what the Repeater is all about. To me that is the main source of >frustration. After using them both, I find the Repeater and EDP don't have >very much in common... [snip] >Some people seem to have convinced themselves that the Repeater is the >same >type of device as the echoplex or jamman or dl-4, etc., and bought it for >those reasons or as a replacement for those things. They want it to be an >echoplex/jamman performance-oriented looper with new features added. >Repeater isn't like that, and when they try to use it that way they get >very frustrated and have some really negative reactions. People who grok >Repeater as more of a recording or remix tool based in looping principles >seem to like it (and don't seem to understand where the negative reactions >come from). Likewise, people who never understood that the echoplex was >entirely designed as a live performance instrument and instead tried to >use >it as a recording tool have often been frustrated by it as well. Count me in as one of the confused. Are you saying that the Repeater is a studio oriented production tool as opposed to a live performance do-it-on-the-fly tool? My experience is with analog and digital delays and the Akai Headrush. I want a live soundscape tool. I'd like to loop guitar/sax/voice/whatever in sync with the step sequencers in my Nord Modular and any arpeggiators I have running on various keyboards. Cheers, Bill