can somebody explain me how i can copy my tracks from A1 to A2 and that i change my sounds without a1 being changed
Use kits.
A1 needs Kit1 for the sound-storage and Pattern A2 needs the Kit to be saved in another slot as Kit2. Then you have two different Kits, that means two different Soundsets.
You can also use Kit1 on Pattern A3 then and Kit2 on Pattern A4. If you wanna change sound again for A5, then make another kit for it.
Hope that helps.
A1 needs kit1 , you can not choose another kit for a1 ?
I donât completely understand because when I go over from a1 to a2 I want everything the same from sounds I just want to modify some parameters on a2 without a1 being modified If you choose another kit for a2 then all of your tracks are changed to the sound of the other kit if I understand correctly
I thougt by copy past the pattern and copy past the tracks to a2 you can change the parameters without a1 being touched
Patterns are linked to kits. The drum sound on every track (ie. each pad) makes up a kit.
Let me illustrate:
If you have pattern A1 linked to a kit youâve saved as âBig Drumsâ and paste the same pattern to A2, then A2 will by default be using the Big Drums kit. Any changes you make to the drum sound parameters in A2 will then change the sounds present in the kit assigned to the pattern - which we know is the Big Drums kit - and these sound changes will therefore be applied to any pattern also linked to the Big Drums kit. The only sound changes that will not affect the kit are parameter locks (ie. holding a trig and changing the sounds for that particular trig).
So the solution, if you want to change your sounds for A2 but not have them also changed for A1, is to save the A2 kit as âBig Drums 2â. This will change the kit for A2, but leave A1 as the original Big Drums.
Remember, patterns are linked to kits! Hereâs something you can do: Think of each pattern as the rhythm youâre playing, and the kit as the actual drum kit youâre playing on. Consider what would happen if you played these patterns in real life on your real drum kit. You play pattern A1. Then you play pattern A2 but decide you need to change the sound a bit, so you swap out your snare drum for a different one. If you then play the original A1 pattern again without changing the snare drum back to what it was previously, you would still be using the snare drum from the A2 pattern, not the one you were using for A1. And thatâs what happens on the Rytm when you change sounds in A2 without saving a different kit, and then go back to A1 - any changes you make to the kit affect the sounds in any pattern linked to that kit.
Iâve only recently got my head around this!
and I have to rename the kit leak to leak 2 or make an empty kit that I cal leak 2 and save it to a2 and then copy the pattern from a1 to a2
ok I just have to rename the kit in a2 to leak 2 and save it thatâs it
Exactly!
Patterns are linked to kits. The drum sound on every track (ie. each pad) makes up a kit.
Let me illustrate:
If you have pattern A1 linked to a kit youâve saved as âBig Drumsâ and paste the same pattern to A2, then A2 will by default be using the Big Drums kit. Any changes you make to the drum sound parameters in A2 will then change the sounds present in the kit assigned to the pattern - which we know is the Big Drums kit - and these sound changes will therefore be applied to any pattern also linked to the Big Drums kit. The only sound changes that will not affect the kit are parameter locks (ie. holding a trig and changing the sounds for that particular trig).
So the solution, if you want to change your sounds for A2 but not have them also changed for A1, is to save the A2 kit as âBig Drums 2â. This will change the kit for A2, but leave A1 as the original Big Drums.
Remember, patterns are linked to kits! Hereâs something you can do: Think of each pattern as the rhythm youâre playing, and the kit as the actual drum kit youâre playing on. Consider what would happen if you played these patterns in real life on your real drum kit. You play pattern A1. Then you play pattern A2 but decide you need to change the sound a bit, so you swap out your snare drum for a different one. If you then play the original A1 pattern again without changing the snare drum back to what it was previously, you would still be using the snare drum from the A2 pattern, not the one you were using for A1. And thatâs what happens on the Rytm when you change sounds in A2 without saving a different kit, and then go back to A1 - any changes you make to the kit affect the sounds in any pattern linked to that kit.
Iâve only recently got my head around this![/quote]
Great explanation, thanks!