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Re: crossfading
The device I built for Todd Green can allow you to do this in it's
latest rendition we're working on. I could mod his original to do it
but he didn't see use for it in his performance at the time.
The perf. controller I built again, has four channels. THere is a VCA
box in the rack that has the jamman units. The control voltages for
those come from his pedal board. He has one volume pedal. And a box
for the record/erase etc. functions. And a box for
selecting/deselecting channels, muting channels and indicating that
status, and indicating the current volume of that channel. And there's
a global select/deselect button for convenience though he never uses
that he said. -Bob
Per Boysen wrote:
> On 11 jan 2007, at 16.31, aaron leese wrote:
>
>> I'm not sure if this posted last time, there is almost never NO
>> reponse on this list.
>>
>> I was just wondering if anyone else is interested in being able to
>> crossfading between loop ..... seems like a useful feature to me
>> ..... especially for DJs who use crossfaders ad nauseum.
>> but I don't know if I have really seen it done much before.
>
>
> I am! I'm definitely interested in crossfading between loops and I do
> it quite often in my sets.
>
>> If your not sure what I mean by crossfading between loops, please
>> check out this demo:
>> www.flyloops.com/drum1.swf
>
>
> Yes, I hear you. The guy on the video seems to use a dj mixer and
> those do all rely on a global crossfade control fader to morph
> between two channels, typically carrying a turntable signal each. I
> guess what you are interested in is the MORPHING quality? I mean, a
> lot of loopers do "cross switching" all the time, jumping from let's
> say beat three in loop one to beat there in loop two and eventually
> back again. But there's no simultaneous fading happening here, no
> morphing, just a direct switching.
>
> Don't know if you're interested in loose feedback on the topic, but
> since this is a discussion list - here we go...
>
> A very simple kind of crossfade between two mono loops is to use the
> pan knob for a stereo channel; if the stereo channel is played back
> in mono the pan knob will work just as a crossfading volume contol.
> Myself I have done a lot of crossfading with an analog filterbank
> that gives the option to use filter cut-off for to morph from one
> signal chain into another one (picked up the idea long ago from
> hearing mixes by ARmand van Helden). For anyone using Ableton Live
> there is a built-in corssfade function: each track/channel can be
> given an "A" or "B" suffix to bind them for either side of the
> crossfade controller. When looping with many looping devices or with
> a multi channel looper I do crossfades by using the volume faders. In
> Mobius I have certain scripts (binded to physical MIDI buttons on my
> Faderfox hand controller) that either Fade In or Fade Out the loop
> playing on a certain Track/Channel. To set off an automized crossfade
> I simply press two buttons: FAde Out for the playing loop and Fade IN
> for the silent loop that I want to take over. I tend to prefer long
> crossfade times for this because I play instruments at the same time,
> but also because I find that more musically interesting. To create
> glitchy stuff (that many DJ's do on a dj mixer/turntables) I rather
> like to use the direct slice cutting of a loop - inserting chunks of
> new audio here and there. Speaking about Fade In/Out, the AU looping
> plug-in Augustus Looper already have built-in support for doing that.
> The GUI have a button named "Fade" and it fades in if the volume is
> down and fades out if the volume is up - even better than my
> scripting fix in Mobius! When running multiple Augstus Loop plug-ins
> this function gives a crossfade functions.
>
> Greetings from Sweden
>
> Per Boysen
> www.boysen.se (Swedish)
> www.looproom.com (international)
> http://tinyurl.com/fauvm (podcast)
> http://www.myspace.com/looproom
>
>
>
>