


Overall the plug-in has its quirks which can be a bit irritating to adjust to. However, it does keep the patches in the session in Pro Tools if you save in Pro Tools. I like listing the order of surfaces in this area because Structure free does not list the name of the sample you are playing.Ī final note I have about Structure Free is that it does not allow you to save patches separately and reload them, because it is a free version of AIR Music Tech’s Structure. Other fun little tidbits in Structure Free include a note bar located above the keyboard. To counter this, the easiest way is to pick everything you need and pull them all in or to make a new patch box so you don’t reset the one you have already made. For example, if I made a patch with three different surfaces on different octaves and then decided to drag in another set of samples separately, it will reset the whole patch and only have the samples I just dragged in. Surface Free will replace your patch with whatever you drag in. If you realize later that you want to add a surface, you would have to drag all the samples into the patch again. One advice is, once again, labeling the sample but on a different octave.Īnother advice is to drag all the samples you want to use in a patch, regardless of surface, in the beginning.

I felt that I should make some comments on this section also, because it was a bit tricky. Earlier on I mentioned assigning different surfaces to different octaves.
