CyrilleB wrote:Thanks for those informations. I understand the basic concept, but even after watching the tutorial and documentation, I can't figure out the procedure to do this in a quick and efficient way.
After reading your post, it's pretty clear that what you actually want is to have a "one-timing-for-all-tracks" sequencer.
This is what G-Stomper Studio is btw..
CyrilleB wrote:I have a simple 4/4 drums pattern (kick, snare, hi-hat). At some point in the song, there a time signature change (2/4). I just want to copy the original pattern (including the same tempo, effects and sound) to a new pattern in 2/4.
Sorry, but what you say is not correct.
You actually have created a kick drum pattern, then a snare pattern, and finally a hi-hat pattern. That's 3 independent patterns. Note that each track comes with its own independent pattern sequencer, each with it's own individual timing. So when you set the steps per bar in the timing & measure section to 8 (instead of 16) in order to create a 2/4 pattern, then you only change the timing for one single track.
CyrilleB wrote:Is there a quick way to do this without having to re-create a new pattern everytime from scratch? What I mean by pattern is the complete drums sequence (kick, snare, hi-hat) including the dynamics, effects, EQ and timing settings
Thanks for helping
You can copy the entire Scene to another scene slot:
https://www.planet-h.com/gstomper/docs/ ... part30.htmThen set the steps per bar to 8 and the length in bars to 1 in order to create a 2/4 pattern. Just choose whatever track you like to do the change.
Finally, click "Spread across Scene" in the upper right corner of the timing & measure section to apply your timing to all track patterns in the scene.
https://www.planet-h.com/gstomper/docs/ ... part16.htmThat's just one out of many ways to achieve that. For the other ways, please read the docs, as these require a deeper understanding of the application.
Don't expect to learn the entire thing in a week. It's not without reason that the documentation is approximately 1000 pages. G-Stomper (all editions) is huge and it needs some time to get the hang of it. The docs are the most straightforward and also the quickest way to get the hang of the application. Whatever I explain to you in a discussion won't speed up that learning process. Also note that in order to understand every aspect of the docs, it's required to have at least a basic understanding of musical theory. If you don't understand some part, be sure to check out Wikipedia to get an explanation of the used terms.
Other than that, try the same with the pattern set in G-Stomper Studio (there's a free demo to try). Then you see if that fits your needs better.