User Manual
EXAMPLE APPLICATIONS
69
Extracting a Groove
If you think about it, you will realize that all ReCycle MIDI Files are actually timing
maps of how the drums were played in the loop. Many sequencer programs
have the ability to load MIDI Files and apply their timing to the sequenced parts.
The terminology used is “Match Quantize” or “Groove”.
If you use a ReCycle MIDI File as a “groove template”, you can make your se-
quenced parts play back with the timing of the drum loop. For this, you could of
course use the MIDI File you get when exporting. But, you can also create a tim-
ing file only, by exporting the file as a Standard MIDI File. Proceed as follows:
1. Open the sample.
2. Raise the Sensitivity Slider until a lot of slices appear.
3. Activate “Show Grid” on the View menu and work on the slices with
the Mute and Lock tools until you have one slice per eighth note or
sixteenth note.
In many situations there will be no sound on a certain eighth or sixteenth
note. There’s not much you can do about this. You can copy another MIDI
note in the sequencer later, or insert a new one “by hand”. You can also add
a slice manually, at any position.
4. Set the Time Signature and length (Bars/Beats) to whatever the
length of the loop.
The Tempo gets calculated.
5. Make sure “Silence Selected” and “Export as One Sample” are not
activated on the Process menu.
These items should not be ticked.
6. Select Export from the File menu and save as a Standard MIDI File.
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If you use Propellerhead’s Reason, applying a groove to existing
music is a piece of cake. Just Import the MIDI File (or open a REX2
file - you can simply use the “To Track” function to create MIDI data
from the REX2 file) in Reason and select “Get User Groove” from
the Edit menu.
Quantizing Audio
If you have sliced a groove or other recording, you can apply quantizing to it in
the sequencer, if you like.
! Always use at least a small amount of Stretch, to avoid the gaps be-
tween slices that might otherwise occur.
Please note that if you have two REX2 loops in Reason, applying the timing of
one of them to the other is really easy. Use the “To Track” function in Dr. Rex for
one of the loops, and select the resultant MIDI notes in the sequencer. Now se-
lect “Get User Groove” on the Edit menu. Now you can quantize the other loop’s
MIDI note data using the User Groove (see the Reason manual for details).
If you don’t like what you get, Undo the Quantize, and try the other way around,
for example.