- Guides, tutorials and docs
- Learning the Woovebox
- The very basics
- Quick start tutorial and video
- Tempo and BPM
- Tracks
- Patterns
- Live pattern recording
- Conditional triggering and modification
- Chords
- Arpeggios
- Scales and modes
- Genres
- Patches and Presets
- Sound design
- Paraphonic parts
- Multi-instrument mode
- Risers, fallers, sweeps & ear candy
- Live mode
- Song mode
- Full song writing
- Sampler & vocoder
- Sidechaining, gating, ducking and compression
- Mastering
- Lo-fi & vintage analog and digital emulation
- Randomization
- Hall effect sensor playing
- Advanced techniques
- Undo
- Boot modes
- MIDI, Sync and connecting other gear
- Remote control expander mode
- Wireless MIDI
- Battery and charging
- Hardware quirks and limitations
- Understanding DSP load
- Looking after your Woovebox
- Firmware updates
- Boot modes
- Play stop protection
12/A4 Play stop protection
(firmware 2435+) By keeping 12/A4 pressed while turning the device on, playback is no longer stopped by pressing the play button. Use this mode if you are worried of accidentally stopping playback (for example in a live situation using Live mode) by accidental touching of the play touch area. Playback can be stopped by switching to Song mode (which is a dual button gesture and therefore unlikely to happen accidentally).
You may also be interested in...
- Advanced (under How to approach)
(crucial to get to the core of the Woovebox) understanding how to use tracks and their patterns in Song mode via fragments.
- Full song writing on the Woovebox (under Guides, tutorials and docs)
Song mode is often an after-thought on other grooveboxes, but on your Woovebox, it is an integral part of its design.
- Using time and pitch warp (under Real-time pitch and time warping)
No "warp" pitch correction or time stretching is applied; the slice ("S") pitch is varied ("V") to fit the step length time.
- Steps (under The very basics)
You can set multiple steps this way to the same note, as long as you hold write.
- Patterns (under The very basics)
When a pattern plays (press the play button to start or stop playing), each track steps through these steps.
- Guides, tutorials and docs
- Learning the Woovebox
- The very basics
- Quick start tutorial and video
- Tempo and BPM
- Tracks
- Patterns
- Live pattern recording
- Conditional triggering and modification
- Chords
- Arpeggios
- Scales and modes
- Genres
- Patches and Presets
- Sound design
- Paraphonic parts
- Multi-instrument mode
- Risers, fallers, sweeps & ear candy
- Live mode
- Song mode
- Full song writing
- Sampler & vocoder
- Sidechaining, gating, ducking and compression
- Mastering
- Lo-fi & vintage analog and digital emulation
- Randomization
- Hall effect sensor playing
- Advanced techniques
- Undo
- Boot modes
- MIDI, Sync and connecting other gear
- Remote control expander mode
- Wireless MIDI
- Battery and charging
- Hardware quirks and limitations
- Understanding DSP load
- Looking after your Woovebox
- Firmware updates