I realize it's a new delay, and it's in RB and on Pioneer mixers. And it seems to run 4 times faster than a regular Delay when used with the same length
...And that it does the same in VDJ as it does in RB
But what's the story behind it?
The good ol' internet suggest that it's a semi delay - or a Mittel Trage delay - and that Martin Garrix tends to use it
But I can't find a lot of explanations on what it does exactly, and why it's faster than what you set it to - or why Pioneer felt they needed to add it to mixers that already had regular delay
...And that it does the same in VDJ as it does in RB
But what's the story behind it?
The good ol' internet suggest that it's a semi delay - or a Mittel Trage delay - and that Martin Garrix tends to use it
But I can't find a lot of explanations on what it does exactly, and why it's faster than what you set it to - or why Pioneer felt they needed to add it to mixers that already had regular delay
Posté Sun 07 May 23 @ 12:18 pm
Although the shortest step is indeed 4 times faster, it's actually several delays with different intensity stacked, so the length you set is more like the 'average' delay I suppose.
Due to the different intensities of the different delays it also creates more of a rhythmic effect compared to a single delay.
Due to the different intensities of the different delays it also creates more of a rhythmic effect compared to a single delay.
Posté Sun 07 May 23 @ 12:24 pm
With a delay effect, MT usually stands for Multi Tap.
https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/multi-tap-delay/
https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/multi-tap-delay/
Posté Mon 08 May 23 @ 3:09 pm