i am brand spanking new here - and am really hoping you guys can help me out! i consider myself fluent and knowledgeable with my guitar pedals - and there are a lot of them. this is my first leap in to anything beyond my pedals - and im not sure if this unit is right for me, but the wealth of possibilities is super intriguing to me. i have been looking for a looper - and i discovered the octatrack. why would i put my hard earned money towards a stupid old looper when i could get an octatrack?
im just going to lay out my situation, and maybe someone can help me learn a bit about the octatrack, and make the right decision?
i play guitar in a band. my bandmate uses ableton live with a midi controller keyboard, which he uses to make the drums, bass, keys, synthy noise stuff, and pretty much everything else except guitar. i need a device that i can use as a midi slave to the tempo of his stuff. i know the octatrack can do this.
here is where i get a little confused, and forgive my ignorance, as i have not yet delved into equipment as deep as what you guys are working with.
at its most simple and practical point, i need a device that will play pre-recorded rhythm guitar parts in sync with my band mates ableton live. can the octatrack store multiple rhythm guitar loops like this, to be played over the course of a set? are there presets that would allow me to go from one song to the next? i know the different tracks can hold different samples, but i get confused beyond that.
because i play guitar, i will probably need to get a midi foot controller to start and stop these pre-recorded loops. if there is a way to do this without one, please fill me in.
beyond that simple and fundamental function, i am wondering if i can use the octatrack as a live looper for my guitar stuff. i read that you must pre-determine the length of your loop before recording. is there any way around this? i dont always want a loop to be perfectly in time - starting here and ending there. sometimes i want to lay out a chord change or a wash of reverb mess, and then loop things on top of that. how easily and quickly can i accomplish this in a live setting?
i am really excited about what the octatrack could do for me - taking my music beyond just playing the guitar and truly manipulating samples and my guitar work, but i have to make sure that these simple functions are going to be easily accessible in a live setting, and practical enough to get used often.
i am also curious - what aspects of the octatrack were designed with the guitarist in mind? there is a lot of info out there, as there should be with a unit this deep, but i feel like i might be missing a few things amongst the enormous wealth of data.
any insight you guys could give would be greatly appreciated!
thanks for your time!
jeff