Drop a Break, Chop It
DMC60 offers multiple ways to slice samples — from live tapping to automatic transient detection. Slices are non-destructive markers that reference the original sample.
Four Ways to Chop
Tap pads to the beat while the sample plays. DMC60 drops slice points in real-time at each tap. The most intuitive way to chop a break.
Let the onset detector analyze spectral flux and mark every transient automatically. Adjust sensitivity to catch more or fewer hits.
Split the sample into N equal slices. Quick and precise for evenly-spaced material or when you want consistent slice lengths.
Drag markers directly on the waveform. Full control for surgical edits or unusual source material.
Transient Detector
The onset detector uses spectral flux analysis to find transients. It's tuned for drums and percussion but works on any rhythmic material.
Non-Destructive Slicing
Slices are markers, not cuts. The original sample is never modified. This means you can adjust slice points at any time, undo mistakes, and preserve the source material.
Slices reference the source sample buffer rather than copying data. This is memory-efficient — a 10-second loop chopped into 16 slices uses no additional RAM for the slices themselves.
Slice to Pads
Once you've set your slice points, assign slices to pads with a single action. Slices land on consecutive pads with a shared mute group, ready to play.
Mute Groups for Slices
When slices are assigned to pads, they can share a mute group. This means triggering one slice silences the others — essential for rearranging a chopped break without overlapping tails.
Zero-Crossing Snap
Slice points automatically snap to zero-crossings in the waveform. This eliminates clicks at slice boundaries without requiring manual fades or crossfades.