The incoming MIDI notes do not repitch the sample directly, but you can manually adjust each slice / key’s tuning to create more complex melodic variation out of your source sample. What is Loupe? It’s a Reaktor ensemble that assigns freeform sections of a sample to different MIDI notes and allows them to be pitched, reversed, resized, filtered and enveloped individually. This entry was posted in download, Free Reaktor Ensemble, Granular, Roux, Roux Sequencer and tagged Create Digital Music, grain delay, Noisepages, tutorial, Video on by peterdines. Roux Sequencer Macro for Reaktor from Create Digital Media on Vimeo. Download the ensemble and follow along with the video tutorial. In part one, we look at two uses of this versatile basic ingredient. Anything that could use some sauce, really. Besides, this is a more modular-ready macro, easily popped into anything else you happen to be building or toying with – like the granular delay we’ve been working on. I decided to teach how to use the roux step sequencer in a practical way before diving into the guts because understanding this will make that much easier to untangle. Besides, this is a more modular-ready macro, easily popped into anything else you happen to be building or toying with – anything that could use some sauce, really. I decided to teach how to use the roux step sequencer before diving into the guts of the Frankenloop because understanding this will make that much easier to untangle. With a few simple changes it becomes a pitch sequencer. In its most basic form it can send velocity information to trigger percussion, or modulate instrument parameters like cutoff and resonance. This is a sequencer macro that is the equivalent for programming sequenced instruments in Reaktor – you can take it in any direction from here. In French cooking, there’s a sauce base called a roux (pronounced “roo”) that is the foundation of bechamel and other sauces. Update: hey, this is back online now at ! Awesome! Also see here where I’ve built an updated version of the Roux macro that is used in this tutorial. Well, the product is defunct and the old site is down, so here is the first in a series on the Roux sequencer macro, showing how it can be used to manipulate the read position in a basic grain delay. This is part of a set of tutorials I did for Peter Kirn’s Kore site back in 2008 – we were creating materials that highlighted Native Instruments products and how they could be used in Kore.
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