700 new loops from herodotus in 7 different time signatures
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5703 posts since 8 Dec, 2004 from The Twin Cities
-
- KVRian
- 1378 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from Andorra
I'm an already satisfied customer. 
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5703 posts since 8 Dec, 2004 from The Twin Cities
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5703 posts since 8 Dec, 2004 from The Twin Cities
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5703 posts since 8 Dec, 2004 from The Twin Cities
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5703 posts since 8 Dec, 2004 from The Twin Cities
-
funkychickendance funkychickendance https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=78609
- KVRAF
- 2097 posts since 19 Aug, 2005 from Where Sheep May Safely Graze & They're Using A Chicken 2 Measure It
What happened to the gong collection, BTW?
/funxi
/funxi
Every Potemkin village needs its idiot savant
- KVRian
- 954 posts since 26 Sep, 2005 from UK
The quality of the loops was good, I thought, but a little too fast for my purposes. I'd ask that for future releases you make clearer the bpm of the loops. Thanks! 
One other suggestion would be to hold back on those crash cymbals a little...
One other suggestion would be to hold back on those crash cymbals a little...
Sound design, audio editing, and instrument programming for UVI Workstation and Falcon/MachFive
http://www.iainmorland.net
http://www.iainmorland.net
-
- KVRian
- 1327 posts since 8 Nov, 2003 from DC
This is actually a good time to get these loops. The bundle for both volumes in both .wav and rex2 formats is only $60, which saves you $20 off buying them seperately. But what is really special is that right now, and through September 20th, you can get the pH0.2 bundle which adds Dangerous Grooves 2.0 to the complete Endangered Rhythms for only $65. That's like getting an entire other .wav/rex2 dual format loop library foer $5.00. When was the last time you hired a drummer for $5.00? Or 2 drummers for $65 and have them on call 24/7?
http://www.dangerousbear.com/loops.html
http://www.dangerousbear.com/bundles.html
The huge upside here is that both ER and DG are still ongoing developmental processes. There is much, much more to come in both series, so if you get in now at this bagain price, you will be getting even more musical bang for your bucks with user discount pricing on updates to both libraries. Unlike some products on the market today, these libraries are both now and futureware, but never, ever vaporware.
Endangered Rhythms is as good as it gets in the loop world, and it's only getting better. I'm not at liberty to get too specific about the next volumes, but they will be genre-specific but highly useable by a broad spectrum of musicians, and focused as composition tools.
Dangerous Grooves will be going in some new and musically challenging yet highly utilitarian directions, but those details are best saved for a dBu thread rather than taking the spotlight off John's material. But I do need to dicuss DG here insofar as it is a compliment to ER. Yogi's style is more jazz-funk while John is both a solid rocker and an experimentalist with deep musical knowledge. Both musicians can be said to be "Old School" and forward-looking to the point of being avant-garde. But they are each in his own way grounded in the practical business of getting the music done and sounding right and tight. They are each remarkable pocket players, even when the pocket is in 11/8.
So the real value of these libraries is that they are both practical tools for daily work, and sources of inspiration because as live-played loops, you are getting to interact with the musical imagination of a truly remarkable drummer. Need new material but can't get yourself going? Just load up a loop from Endangered Rhythms and go with the flow.
But enough of this hype. Selling these loops may be my job, but I really believe in them as a musician first. I'm proud of working with John Gump and Johan Rucker, two talented men of personal and musical integrity. I think the loops sell themselves once you've heard the audio. Just go over to John's site and listen. Try some of the freebies there and on dangerousbear.com. Then I think you'll see what no amount of dancing about architecture can tell you, that these loops will make a positive difference in your music.
http://www.dangerousbear.com/loops.html
http://www.dangerousbear.com/bundles.html
The huge upside here is that both ER and DG are still ongoing developmental processes. There is much, much more to come in both series, so if you get in now at this bagain price, you will be getting even more musical bang for your bucks with user discount pricing on updates to both libraries. Unlike some products on the market today, these libraries are both now and futureware, but never, ever vaporware.
Endangered Rhythms is as good as it gets in the loop world, and it's only getting better. I'm not at liberty to get too specific about the next volumes, but they will be genre-specific but highly useable by a broad spectrum of musicians, and focused as composition tools.
Dangerous Grooves will be going in some new and musically challenging yet highly utilitarian directions, but those details are best saved for a dBu thread rather than taking the spotlight off John's material. But I do need to dicuss DG here insofar as it is a compliment to ER. Yogi's style is more jazz-funk while John is both a solid rocker and an experimentalist with deep musical knowledge. Both musicians can be said to be "Old School" and forward-looking to the point of being avant-garde. But they are each in his own way grounded in the practical business of getting the music done and sounding right and tight. They are each remarkable pocket players, even when the pocket is in 11/8.
So the real value of these libraries is that they are both practical tools for daily work, and sources of inspiration because as live-played loops, you are getting to interact with the musical imagination of a truly remarkable drummer. Need new material but can't get yourself going? Just load up a loop from Endangered Rhythms and go with the flow.
But enough of this hype. Selling these loops may be my job, but I really believe in them as a musician first. I'm proud of working with John Gump and Johan Rucker, two talented men of personal and musical integrity. I think the loops sell themselves once you've heard the audio. Just go over to John's site and listen. Try some of the freebies there and on dangerousbear.com. Then I think you'll see what no amount of dancing about architecture can tell you, that these loops will make a positive difference in your music.
