Hey,
2 suggestions for links, which could be imported to your unofficial guide:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b24h6Ggw0uo
best regards
Hey,
2 suggestions for links, which could be imported to your unofficial guide:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b24h6Ggw0uo
best regards
lol
i just tune it by ear
Bit late to the party, but thanks so much for sharing this trick. What a fantastic slicing workaround for a MPC head like me!!!
Hold down [FUNC] key while turning LFO speed, Multiplier also Delay time knobs and values will jump between musical divisions.
Direct pattern change workaround!?
Ok this is very DIY but actually works with a little practice. Pattern 1 is playing and you have already prepared the switch to pattern 2. Before pattern 1 finishes you press the stop and play button like almost simultaniously - but the stop button one milisecond before (two fingers)ā¦ and you have made a direct pattern change.
Yes I hav plans to do something like this in Pure Data, once I get the Digitakt.
In Pure Data I will set up a command that:
This will happen within a few samples.
No one will ever notices
I made this one that works in Ableton Live
http://www.maxforlive.com/library/device/5136/digichain
For my NordDrum2 Iād need to send LSB/MSB CC values for āEcho BPMā and āTone Pitchā. Is this possible from the Digitakt? (I think the answer is ānoāā¦)
Man this thread. I still canāt believe how much more open and awesome this community is compared to the Roland and Akai community. Keep em comin!
try this thread
RECORD IN CHAIN MODE-
For those who want to record sequences longer than 64 steps.
Using chain mode you can create a chain using all 16 patterns in a given bank, once you have chained the patterns in the order and number of patterns you want together you can play it back in one of the two record modeās, either live or stepped record mode and thereby record a single sequence to run up to 1024 total steps.
Iām new to Elektron workflow so I just put this out as a time saver for those with the early questions who donāt know or have all the time in the world to explore whatās not covered in the manual. Iāve had this for a few monthās but I just havenāt really gotten into everything Iām interested in using for lack of time. And this question nagged me since I like performing rather than looping/sequencing per step.
i like to apply that technique but setting the LFO on my hat track to filter depth, and i actually use sine or tri, i find it sounds like a kind of ārising and fallingā change in velocity when dialed in correctly.
I think it only works if you set up straight pattterns , once conditional trigs and polyrythms come into it you end up recording over the same steps, some patterns take several loops before the master change is reached.
Yes, Itās in the manual
Thanks, I just found it. Should have checked more thoroughly before I posted.
IUm, I would say if youāve already started developing a track using that approach with shorter loops, i.e. 16-64 steps and your composing that way then yeah it would probably just confuse what you already have put together.
This is my 1st elektron instrument and I am used to a traditional linear recording approach/workflow. I know my tip is kind of a āno-brainerā if your familar w/elektron devices but Iāve had mine for about 7 months and just finally got around to exploring chain mode and the manual doesnāt state much on what all you can do with it.
So I thought it was a good enough blurb for other newbies who may have the same question as someone who is new to the vast āmodular-esqueā options in approach to workflow that the Digitakt offers.
Well, now that you have me thinking about this, you actually can record even with (for lack of a better term) a ādeep patternā in your chain.
Just have a pattern you can play 1st in the chain so when you add your ādeep patternā you just tap the corresponding trig for that pattern however many times you need it to loop to complete itās full playback and then select whatever patterns you want to chain after it. Just remember when you record, that when that looped pattern starts to play, only input what you want to add in āliveā once, so you arenāt adding trigs on top of the looped pattern during that playback of the chain.
I didnt say it wasnt usefull just that it gets too complicated if you are using the sequencers feature set, if I were starting from scratch with an idea that required 256 steps of constant recording I would use it. Polyrythms and conditional trigs are pretty standard workflow with the Digitakt though and if you have tracks that require different numbers of repetitions to complete their cycle the point at which they come together for a master change is generally more than the screen can show, and thats before you add any other patterns to the list. Digitakt is a performance piece imo and chain mode never really sat with the intended workflow.
Just want to let people know that I tried it out and DT does not react fast enough to do it within a few samples.
I had to delay the change around 10-20 ms or else it didnt work, which made like a small gap.
Anyway, I sold my Digitakt as I actually didnt want a sampler. I found out, hehe
Instead I am hoping to get an Analog Rytm over this weekend, which does change pattern instantly. Crossing my fingers that it is a fully functioning AR that I am going to try out tomorrow
Cross posting this as I think it could be an important technique. I donāt feel it was clear in current documentation for DT and OB.
In a nutshell you can send notes to the VST on midi channel 16 to change patterns.
Itās starts at C0=A01, C#0=A02, D0=A03, etc.
The cool part is that you can use conditional trigs!
For example, in pattern A01 you use C#0 with a 8:8 condition to have it play it 8 times then go to A02.
I havenāt messed with other conditional logic, but Fill works nice to manually trigger a chain of pattern changes.
Best regards,
Gino
Im unsure if this is in the guide, i didnt see it.
You can randomise parameters, by holding down the desired parameter, say AMP. Hold AMP and press YES. This will randomise the parameter values, which can be a fun way to push your sounds in another direction.
You can do this for the āhidden parametersā, hold FUNC and then say Delay, Reverb or Master then YES.