I'm not sure if this is what you mean, but instruments can have more than one note track playing separate note regions in parallel. It's an efficient way to create variation over a repeating motif.
While I was recording, I sent some notes to a Heisenberg device using its Software-keyboard. When pressing a key, I wanted to automatically create a new note track assigned to the Heisenberg to contain looped active regions of another note track(s) and play those regions at the same time, while using their one of their first note(s) as a kind of origin to move all of its note. then let the octave of that note be equal to the octave of the key I pressed.
I still can't explain it right, but there is something that I would like to be automated.
I agree with you. It is possible to do this myself in the Studio using instruments with separate note regions in parallel.
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I'm not sure if this is what you mean, but instruments can have more than one note track playing separate note regions in parallel. It's an efficient way to create variation over a repeating motif.
While I was recording, I sent some notes to a Heisenberg device using its Software-keyboard. When pressing a key, I wanted to automatically create a new note track assigned to the Heisenberg to contain looped active regions of another note track(s) and play those regions at the same time, while using their one of their first note(s) as a kind of origin to move all of its note. then let the octave of that note be equal to the octave of the key I pressed.
I still can't explain it right, but there is something that I would like to be automated.
I agree with you. It is possible to do this myself in the Studio using instruments with separate note regions in parallel.
Each time you press keys during recording, the Studio creates a new note track at the bottom with a new note region for your notes.