Loops – Line 6 Spider Jam Amp User Manual

Page 21

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Workflow

4•3

Loops

Spider Jam loops come in 2 flavors, either as part of a recording that you created in the

Spider Jam, or as a WAV file that was mixed down from a Spider Jam recording or imported

from your computer. Loops created in Spider Jam will always work together with the Song

or Drum track you started with, but there are many other creative ways to work with loops.

Here are two examples of using WAV files to create multiple loops in Spider Jam:

Record multiple overdubs to your original loop, then mix them down as individual

WAV files using the Spider Jam Playback Levels to mute the other tracks. Build any

number of tracks that will sync together, then edit and mix them in your DAW.
Create custom loops on your computer, then import them into Spider Jam for

jamming, performing or overdubbing. As long as your imported WAV files match the

exact length of the original reference loop, they’ll sync and loop together perfectly.

Any mono 16 bit 44.1 WAV file can be imported and looped in Spider Jam for further

overdubbing, including Spider Jam Mixdown files. This greatly extends the functionality

of Spider Jam. To demonstrate the possibilities, here’s a multi-track tutorial to try:

Press the

SONG button, navigate to the Drums tab, then turn the wheel to select

095 Straight Groove (or use any other Drum track). Press the R Arrow to load it.

Press the

SONG button again to display the Tempo/Pitch Modes menu item. Select

it, press R Arrow and select Time Stretching And Pitch Shifting. Set the tempo to

101 bpm. Press REC and watch the count in the display. After 4 bars, press STOP.

Straight Groove

SONGS

RECORDINGS

SD

DRUMS

PITCH SHIFT

ORIG

95 BPM

SEMI

0

You just created a 4 bar drum loop at 101 bpm. Now select an Amp Model that

sounds good to you, press PLAY and jam along with the Drum track until you have

a rhythm guitar part that works with the drums. When you’re ready, press REC to

overdub your guitar part. Play for only 4 bars then press STOP. Listen to your take.

If you’re not happy with it, press UNDO to clear it, then press REC to overdub your

guitar part again. Repeat the process until you have a guitar track you like.

TIME STRETCH

TEMPO

101 BPM

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