Hey @Matt as a technical test, I think this is a great idea. You can see the limitations of your technology / setup, and you can see that you need to change some stuff to make it easier to hear you.
TBH I opened it because I wanted to see / hear you play, but this wasn't that.
From a teaching perspective I think you should aim to say (and ideally show) what you're going to offer in the first 30 seconds.
Your first 30-60 seconds didn't tell me much here. I listened for about 3 mins, then skipped in and saw you edited some stuff, which told me a lot more. When I didn't hear music I moved on.
I basically think you should keep doing these and get feedback from people who want to use tools / instruments like loopdrop.
Maybe ask people directly - what do you want to know how to do? I think teaching someone in person could teach you a bunch of this if you haven't already done it.?
hey @matt, this is cool, i appreciate the frank conversational style.
as you and @mixxx said, i agree that in a real tutorial you'll probably want to very clearly outline what the session will include, before you dive in.
microphone is way too quiet (so audio output from Loop Drop sounds way too loud... whoops)
yeah, this was the only reason i stopped watching the video, i either couldn't hear you talk or the audio output was too loud.
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