Something I also learned today from watching you do this is that with the second knob below the display you can extend your TR-Rec pattern. Really wonder why I never noticed that.
This was actually very interesting. So I'm guessing you do this on an empty / custom scene so you can go back to it and work on it a bit mroe at a later point ? Because I've already had it happen a few times that I loose the TR-Rec I made when switching scenes or other things. Let me go play with this, really appreciate this. Next thing is probably play a bit more with the patters so you can indeed have separate parts with separate piecces of the drums playing. And me personally I'm also quite interested in the process of how you do it, allows me to learn things from my Fantom I never played with.
For sure. I remember the first time I lost a project on the Fantom, just by switching out, and accidentally moving the curser. I don't think it should be so easy to lose, without turning the power off, but I learned my lesson afterwards.That said, I have been emptying the scenes as I go, so every project/scene is a blank slate. I will be going over advanced pattern building and tips for the TR-REC in the next video, before moving onto the next subject, so if you have anything that you are curious about specifically, let me know. Thank you for your comments!
@@VIRALBEATS360 I think personally I just need to learn how to work with the pattern and song building tools, and start to explore the capabilities of hte Fantom. Keep up the great work!
Not on the fly...you need to change it with the MFX then save it to a new Tone afterwards. Even the pitch wheel keeps them the same octave. It is a pain, for sure, but there are also kits that have a few drums, with small ranges to choose from. Not a lot, but I found the Kick kit to help with that.