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DMS delves into the dark art of looping samples with the help of this great free loop editor for OS X. Download it here now. For a small fee you can also upgrade it's capabilities.
Loop Editor is the easiest stand-alone application that we've come across for looping short samples. The program itself is extremely intuitive to use, we didn't even have to take a glance at the manual to gain excellent results. We're not going to delve into each window and its function here, and as usual we'll plough straight in there and get going with the practical...remember to check our Glosssary of music technology terms if you need it!
First off grab yourself a reasonable short sample, say a synth pad or stab like the one below.
Here's an example of a rough loop with no crossfade applies. You can see a close-up zero crossing display of your loop points in the bottom half of the main screen - the closer your points are to a zero crossing the chances are the less "clickey" your loops will be.
Much smoother! Now all we need to do is save the sample, import it into our sample software, making sure that it recognises our loop points (most will do this automatically). And there you go, make sure your sample is tuned correctly and play away! You may find that playing the note at too low down your keyboard that the loop clicks. This is simply a result of a single sample being played well outside of its original key a single - using multi-samples taken from different octaves will prevent this artifact (if you have them!).
In our example below we've loaded our edited sample into an EXS24 sampler, added some LFO to Filter and played a riff using sustained notes much longer than the original un-edited sample:
Ok we're not going to get any awards there but you get the idea. As if looping sounds wasn't enough Loop Editor also allows you to create Apple Loops and Acidized Loops. Handy!
Happy looping!
DMS
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