21-02-21, 02:25 -
Your original explanation of the mute group implementation made sense. The way the combination functions is fine.
I think the effect I was looking for is most prevalent in hip hop and vocal sample-based electronic music. Basically a note repeat for longer samples. I tried to think of a good example of this effect and the beginning of Fatboy Slim - Gangster Trippin' was the first thing that came to mind for some reason.
onc2 would mean hitting the note twice in order to trigger the sample a second time. If you wanted to trigger the sample 2 or more times in a short interval, it would require lots of taps.
I don't think it's a large issue considering there are a lot of different use cases for Samplerbox. It's not going to cover every case perfectly. One easy work around is to map the same sample to two adjacent midi notes and just alternate to achieve the "note repeat" effect. %rnds is another possible way to achieve similar results. I was just asking to see if someone found something I missed.
I think the effect I was looking for is most prevalent in hip hop and vocal sample-based electronic music. Basically a note repeat for longer samples. I tried to think of a good example of this effect and the beginning of Fatboy Slim - Gangster Trippin' was the first thing that came to mind for some reason.
(21-02-21, 01:27)hansehv Wrote: ..so perhaps onc2 is what you're looking for...
onc2 would mean hitting the note twice in order to trigger the sample a second time. If you wanted to trigger the sample 2 or more times in a short interval, it would require lots of taps.
I don't think it's a large issue considering there are a lot of different use cases for Samplerbox. It's not going to cover every case perfectly. One easy work around is to map the same sample to two adjacent midi notes and just alternate to achieve the "note repeat" effect. %rnds is another possible way to achieve similar results. I was just asking to see if someone found something I missed.
This post was last modified: 21-02-21, 02:26 by Ken.