![]() ![]() In Part 1 we introduced the five main areas within FL Studio – the Browser (for your samples, sounds, instruments, effects and so on) the Channel Rack (with Patterns for beats and notes) the Playlist (where the song arrangement comes together) the Piano Roll editor and finally the Mixer. This time around we’re going to look at two of these areas – namely the Patterns and Piano Roll editor – in more depth. Understanding just these two elements will give you that ‘Eureka’ moment, as you’ll realise that these are the core of the program. You create complete tunes with this Pattern approach but, within it, the Piano Roll editor offers a familiar recording and editing environment for ‘traditional’ DAW users. Open up FL Studio and you’ll be faced with an empty Pattern complete with four drum sounds, so we’ll launch straight into that and create a simple 4/4 drum pattern over four bars. The advantage of using Patterns is quickly realised when using the Clone option from FL Studio’s many features. Shareware media editing software download, reviewed by Fernando Ortega Advertisement Easy video editing program useful for online video publishing at YouTube. ![]() It allows you to quickly build up a library of different patterns simply by duplicating existing ones and then editing them for some variation. AVS Video Editor 9.9.2.408 Video editing app for Windows Review: Full-featured video editor that enables users to trim, merge, split and apply effects to videos in multiple formats. ![]()
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