jamrod
3
Excited that you’re getting the OT!
Top suggestion I’d make if you’re planning to play the tracks live: make each live set in a single project. Messing around to combine tracks later is time-consuming and fiddly. If you think of each bank as a song, you still have 16 patterns per song, and you can get range out of each one via scenes and parts (and tweaking on external gear, assuming you’re using the OT as a MIDI sequencer).
This hasn’t been natural for me (I like saving relatively small variations as their own pattern, which fills things up quickly), but it’s definitely what makes most sense with the OT workflow.
In terms of setting levels, I haven’t had any problems. I just record in at high but not peaking levels and it all seems to work from there. I noticed that the OT is quieter than most of the rest of my gear, but it’s easy enough to set levels right with a mixer.
Definitely read the manual, of course. Moreso than the other machines, the OT has quirky functions that took me a little longer to develop muscle memory for. (I had a flashback to this the other night when I was showing the OT to my friend who, despite being experienced with plenty of other gear, was totally lost.)
One additional tip: play around with sample chains. You can get really cool natural / chaotic sounding patterns going if you have some randomization via chains.
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