Reference Guide

292
Recording
Step recording
See:
“Step pattern recording” on page 292
Step pattern recording
The Pattern option lets you define a repeating rhythmic pattern of notes and rests so that you can
use step recording more efficiently. For example, suppose your project is in 4/4 time, and one track
has a pattern that is two measures long: quarter notes in the first measure and on the first two beats
of the second measure, followed by a half-note rest on the last two beats. This pattern has six
quarter notes followed by two quarter-note rests.
When you use step recording with Auto Advance, you can play the six quarter notes and SONAR
will automatically advance to the next step. However, to skip over the rests, you need to click the
Advance button two times.
With pattern recording, you define a pattern that indicates where the rests appear in the pattern.
SONAR will then skip over the rests automatically, so you don’t need to click the Advance button at
all.
SONAR displays patterns as a combination of digits (which represent beats that contain notes) and
dots (which represent beats that contain rests). The pattern described previously looks like this:
1 2 3 4 5 6 . .
Here is another example:
1 2 . 4
This pattern automatically skips over every third beat; SONAR interprets this pattern as “one, two,
rest, four.”
Here is one final example based on 4/4 time, with a step size of eighth-note triplets (twelve steps per
measure):
1 2 3 4 . 6 7 . 9 0 . 2
No matter how you enter a pattern, SONAR displays the digits in sequence, with periods replacing
digits at each step where a rest would occur. You can create patterns with up to 64 steps.
Auto Advance NumPad Period “.”
Toggle step recording SHIFT+ R
Default setting or option Default shortcut
Table 38.