woohoo, the show looks great from what i've seen, and there's a bit of fxbox at 33:00 :-) very nice
I've opted for an alternative resampling method that is more "musical" than "mathematical" in it's approach - and quick to use without stopping playing anything. I still wince when I look at Audacity and want to do some thing simple...
There are 3 methods of resampling: the first is size resampling - in the menu - so you have a loop and you want make another sample the same speed - just resize it to the size of the sample you want, it stretches the pitch appropriatly - all you need to enter at the dialog is the new size, it should show you the current size.
the next is the bpm resampling - in the menu - this is principally the same as the size resamping, but using the base/play frequency it calculated the currrent bpm - just enter the new bpm you want and it stretches the pitch appropriatly.
the last type is traditional frequency resampling - this is the button on the screen - part of the confusion is that it uses the base pitch you have set by using the keyboard, or the switch in the options - in the dialog you then hold click the "keyboard" button down you can choose a note from the keyboard as the destination pitch, release mouse when done. - but you may have already changed the base pitch by using the keyboard, so you might end up with same source and desination, or go up instead of down and visavera - so you have to close the dialog, replay on the keyboard the base/source pitch, open resample you can also type in the new frequency - i'm thinking of how to alter this action - also the dialogs are basic without instructions... the octave up and down should be obvious, but maybe not how they operate on ranges - if there is no range selected it operates on the whole sample and changes the size of the memory bank - if you work with a range they resize the range, but then mix it back with the original - so if the size is longer due to resampling down the sample will replace the original sound and then start mixing with the original waveform when they overlap - this action is true for all the resmapling routines.
when importing 16bit files they may be stereo so use the deinterlace option before resampling as you'd get a distrortion here - i should maybe try what that sounds like