[EDIT] + [PLAY]Â
[OPTION] + [LEFT or RIGHT]
[EDIT] + [UP or DOWN]
[SHIFT] + [OPTION]
[SHIFT] + [EDIT]
Press [SHIFT] + [EDIT] again after pasting the instrument
With the cursor on the parameter, hold [OPTION] and rotate, slide or press the knob, fader or button with the MIDI CC
[OPTION] + [TOUCHSCEEEN]
[EDIT] + [TOUCHSCEEEN]
You can use the DRY setting, just below PAN, to adjust or balance the overall volume of the instrument
Create an instrument, load a sample, change the PLAY mode to FWDLOOP and LENGHT between 0 and 4 (this changes the size of the grain, so you can adjust later until it sounds good). Then, in the envelope view, set the LFO to LOOP ST, OSC to RAMP UP, TRG to RETRIG, adjust the FRQ to the number of bars you want to hear (10 is 1 bar or 16 steps) and adjust AMT to to adjust how far the loop scans through the sample. You can also adjust the envelope to make the loop sound better
You can use the LFO retrigger command LT1 or LT2 to change the start point of your time stretched sample. Alternatively, you can use the LOP command for this purpose. Using the LF1 or LF2 commands will change the speed of the time stretch. And, lastly, you can also change the pitch of your sample on different steps to make it more interesting
In sample editor, go to SLICE MARKER, select a marker, then go to its position and press [OPTION] + [DIRECTION] to snap that market to tempo