![]() ![]() We'll use C the C trigger will show up as C1 on the midi track in the project page(1-4 depending on which of the 4 octaves you use. You see the keyboard octave on the bottom? Each one of those correlates to a certain key. If you need clearing up on that, Beat Designer has a function called JUMP on the top right of it's window. You can have them triggered through midi or the project page, or both which would help with queue's. On your related question If you have your loops mapped out to the tempo of your currently playing track, an idea could be to load them onto Groove Agent, then use the Jump function in Beat Designer to switch loop to loop, kindly, it will loop the last played sample until you trigger another. The problem one could foresee is that if you were to load a VST in Cubase while it's playing, it would stop your track for that split second, and from what I see from Ableton users, is that Ableton doesn't do that.
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