Thanks, good tip. I was reading the manual last night and I think I get the hierarchy of how things live in there at least. It’s more trying to understand how it’s musical—that is to say, is it a machine to play and make music or is it more a machine to process and change music, if you understand what I mean (of course, who can say what any of those things mean anyway, but, that’s what I have, word-wise).

In the Octatrack manual introduction what Elektron themselves propose is to look at the OT as: “looper device”, “radical sound processor”, “a backing track machine”, “live setup hub”, “remix tool” or “effects unit extraordiaire”, with short explanations beneath each proposed use. And from what I’ve learned here, all those things sound about correct.

So I’m trying to get my head around how (or if) people use the Octatrack in maybe more melodic, or subtle, or completely unexpected ways. To say that if you want samples to layer on top of each other, you can only have 8 samples—is either a ridiculous limitation or a fantastic opportunity for lots of other things. If I think of the Octatrack as first having just ONE track, like a monophonic Machinedrum that can only play samples, and then multiply that by EIGHT it suddenly becomes a very unlimited and vast machine, at least in my mind.

But all your replies are making how it works clearer, so thanks for that, it’s much appreciated!

So, on average, how many samples do you usually have going per track, or all in all?

How often do you use one track as a master track? Always?