Definitely use this, it's easy to hyperfixate too though. Also recording slower is fine in my book too, since music isn't a competition or anything. I think people should still aim to play tight though!
Yep totally agree, having a part down solid and recording it in a single pass is definitely preferred, but there are times you just have to use the hammer.
@@tomw1970 Funny thing, I found the video and my history showed that I watched it. Open it up and the first comment is mine, from 9 months ago, saying how option 1 is a really useful, and of course, completely forgot about it 9 months later. Thanks for finding this!
Im certain I've seen either Kenny or Jon show something similar to what you were asking but which one and how long ago...? Idk. However could you unlink your loop points from your time selection and move the leading loop point back to where you want your pre-roll to start?
It seems like you should be able to do it. The blooper at the end is basically me saying I went into the video assuming this is how preroll worked, and then found out pretty quickly that it doesn't, and only works the first time. I got around it by using another track, and that's something I've done a lot in the past, so it wasn't a huge deal. Just record 4 measures and trim down to 2 when moving it up. But it would be interesting to see if the preroll worked like that. I'll check both of their channels and see if I can find anything. Thanks!
Definitely use this, it's easy to hyperfixate too though. Also recording slower is fine in my book too, since music isn't a competition or anything. I think people should still aim to play tight though!
Yep totally agree, having a part down solid and recording it in a single pass is definitely preferred, but there are times you just have to use the hammer.
Was this helpful? Do you also write riffs that you can't play? I was only halfway joking there!
Found it. Jon did a video 9 months ago titled Loop Recording With Pre-roll.
@@tomw1970 Funny thing, I found the video and my history showed that I watched it. Open it up and the first comment is mine, from 9 months ago, saying how option 1 is a really useful, and of course, completely forgot about it 9 months later. Thanks for finding this!
Im certain I've seen either Kenny or Jon show something similar to what you were asking but which one and how long ago...? Idk. However could you unlink your loop points from your time selection and move the leading loop point back to where you want your pre-roll to start?
It seems like you should be able to do it. The blooper at the end is basically me saying I went into the video assuming this is how preroll worked, and then found out pretty quickly that it doesn't, and only works the first time. I got around it by using another track, and that's something I've done a lot in the past, so it wasn't a huge deal. Just record 4 measures and trim down to 2 when moving it up. But it would be interesting to see if the preroll worked like that. I'll check both of their channels and see if I can find anything. Thanks!