Yeah, that's gonna take some practice to get those all even. Plus, you have to have a consistent attack (how you hit the strings to make them vibrate) because differences in the amount of vibration are also differences in the volume.
It takes some effort to get used to it. I've played with a looper quite a bit, but don't regularly need one while performing.
That i noticed since i got to start immediately and always have a half second or so silence so i use the dub feature to try and hit that with a dub fill chord to hide it.i need it so i can have a bassline or background chord progessive to hide my crappy playing and hopefully some mistakes
To me, the only real reason to use a looper is to just play with yourself (no inuendo intended) or if you're performing.
In the first case, you get to adjust as much as you need to. If it's the latter, you have to get good at it. I've noticed the folks good at it have pretty good timing - or they wait at least a brief second when they change/add/stop a loop.
See i only play by my self have no one to jam with so i kinda of need get a good one
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