whoa. i’m not sure i’ve seen anyone use any hardware as masterfully as your videos. the craftsmanship and creativity are very inspiring, thank you andre!
Wow! An exemplary performance and tutorial rolled into one. I’ve been watching some Loupe videos as I have one arriving soon (long time user of EDP+ but Loupe is new to me). Your video demonstrates how easy it is to jump from game to game and push a loop pretty much in any direction you want. Particularly inspired by the lo-fi stuff and the ‘mutant funk’ section at the end. Fabulous stuff Andre, as always, and so informative!
@@XISTH Windowing has become "scrolling" in the Loupe. There's a dedicated knob on the face that lets you move forwards or backwards through the history of the loop, pick a previous state as your new "default" loop, and even record the scroll behavior in real time as a new loop! It's pretty nuts.
wow boy, this pedal is a looping beast 🤯. One thing i don't quite understand with the fx and games of the loupe: when you activate an FX by pressing one of the programmed buttons to process the loop, and then jumping directly to a different game but without deactivating the original previous fx, is the new programmed button-function of the new game selected changing the current engaged fx as you scroll and select the game, or it won't change until another button press takes over..? hope my question makes any sense! :P Cheers
That was inspirational! New roads to take. Currently people are falling all over themselves to get the Cooper Effects Gen Loss. Am I wrong to think that the Loupé can cover all that it does?
Thanks for tuning in! Much appreciated. From what I've seen, Loupé does NOT do everything the Generation Loss does. The latter goes waaaaaaaay deeper into lofi territory, with a wide array of different types of algorithms to mess with sound. The Loupé can get into that sort of thing, but it really doesn't have the range or variety of ways to deliberately degrade audio. Bear in mind that I've never played with a Gen Loss pedal, so take my words with all the grains of salt. I have checked out a good amount of the promotional material, though, and it really seems to offer a range and variety of lofi sounds that the Loupé does not. On the other hand, Loupé is designed as a looper first and foremost, whereas Gen Loss has no looping capabilities that I'm aware of. So a lot of this is down to focus and intent with each device.