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RE: Looping with a drummer
I'm not a drummer, nor do I play one on tv, but for recording
purposes I use a homebrew set of drum triggers with a drum machine as a
sound module, coupled with a mic'ed snare drum. The snare lets me put in
lots of rolls, rimshots, and other brufordisms not possible to convincingly
program on a drum machine. Sometimes I will get a loop/groove going by
playing a few bars of drums, but generally I find I can get the groove to
swing more if I start the loop with bass or piano, and layer the drums on
top of that. This lets me practice my drumming skills and jam a bit before
committing the drums to the jamman. The hardest thing about playing drums
to me is keeping the timing steady, but with the jamman I only gotta be
tight for a few bars and let it loop away. I keep it real simple so I have
room to embellish later as the loop progresses and builds. Before adding
more percussion to the loop, I change the reverb program on the drums to
add
different layers of depth. Or, if in a slighty mischievious or naughty
mood, well gosh, I dial in one of those crazy vortex patches, all good
clean fun. No "butt-looping", this.
Right now in my looping, I am very much feeling the need to take
that
next step, namely aquiring a method of storing and editing the loops into a
coherent form of sorts. Others on the list are in the same quandary, so
c'mon you more experienced loop-types you, share your methods with the
list.
<now imagining several sage loopers, Tolkiean in apperance,
stroking
long gray beards and readjusting wizard hats while nodding slowly as they
ponder such plaintive pleas... nope, wait a minute, now I'm imagining a fat
guy in a bathrobe eating a sandwich. nevermind.>
steve