02-10-2020, 05:24 AM
Hello folks. I've been getting to know my NerdSEQ for several months now and I'm loving it. I have a newbie question for anyone with the spare time:
I don't have any experience with traditional tracker sequences, so I'm probably overlooking something obvious, but I think I'm missing the point on tables. What kinds of applications are they used for? The manual highlighted one such use case: run a table at a faster speed than its sequencer track, and then use the transpose feature to create chord-like arpeggios within each sequencer step. I can envision different ways one could riff on this idea, but I'm having a hard time seeing other useful table applications.
I would love to hear about how you're using tables in ways that are different than the above, especially the FX column. Thanks!
I don't have any experience with traditional tracker sequences, so I'm probably overlooking something obvious, but I think I'm missing the point on tables. What kinds of applications are they used for? The manual highlighted one such use case: run a table at a faster speed than its sequencer track, and then use the transpose feature to create chord-like arpeggios within each sequencer step. I can envision different ways one could riff on this idea, but I'm having a hard time seeing other useful table applications.
I would love to hear about how you're using tables in ways that are different than the above, especially the FX column. Thanks!