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Bram Bos Gauss Field Looper - Tutorial: Introducing this incredible Tape Loop Effect
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Thanks Leo!!!!! You are a master at pumping out these videos!!!
Yeah - cheers Leo. 👍
I was asked recently to explain how I use Gauss Field Looper as a more standard loop recorder synced to a transport, figured others might be looking for the same, so I’m pasting it here (couldn’t find a more general Gauss thread):
I’m sure this might all be common knowledge, but this is how I use Gauss as a synced looper.
After opening Gauss in an fx slot, the first thing I do is go to the loop length knob and double tap it. This switches the buffer bar measurement from seconds to beats. I do this over the “seconds” option because you can then adjust the tempo of the project to whatever you like and Gauss will be synced up more easily (you could do seconds of course, but then you’d have to math out how many seconds you want for the given tempo and who wants to do all THAT! 😉). Next I select the amount of beats I want in the loop. I usually always go with 32 beats, giving you 8 bars of 4/4 in the buffer, which for me is usually all I need, but feel free to experiment with what works best for you! Next i go to sync and hit 8 (the buffer is set to 8 bars of 4/4, so syncing 8 bars covers the whole buffer. Duh, right?! Haha). Next I turn on monitor so I can hear what I’m playing (duh x2) AND overdub. If you don’t turn on overdub, when you hit record it’ll jump to the beginning of the buffer. It will eventually sync back up with the transport again, but you’re sitting there waiting for it and who’s got time for that? With overdub on, just hit record. You’re good to go! Record away! When done, feel free to hit record again whenever to overdub more stuff into the buffer. After that, let’s say you start messing with the playback speed, this will usually detach you from the syncage. Shucks, right? Wrong! Just hit sync off and then back on again and the altered buffer will sync back up with the transport. If you slowed or sped it up, when you resync you won’t get the full buffer being that time was messed with, so it’ll be shorter or longer. Likewise if you ever find your buffer unhinged from the tempo/transport for other reasons, just unsync and sync again. Additionally, you can shorten the looped length of the 32 beats to say 16 or 8 by syncing it to a lower number of bars. That’s bout it!
(OH! In the case of AUM, after you load Gauss in an audio channel, pick your amount of beats, and sync it: before you add instruments or record anything, go to the bottom and duplicate the channel as many times as you like and boom, multiple synced up Gauss instances all with the same buffer!)