
TL DR: I didn't check the Hainbach video if he means something very specific and weird with "asynchronous loops", or if the post is old enough that it wasn't for some reason possible then, but you can certainly have clips / loops of different lengths running against each other in the current "stable" Deluge 3.1 firmware as well - just make a new track for each and adjust their sequence lengths to whatever you want. It's really cool workflow-wise to be able to do that inside a single sequence, though. The 4.0 just allows you to do the same thing inside a single clip / sequence, so the individual rows (samples or notes) have different lengths, but you don't really need that to do polymetric rhythms.

The sequencer itself has more resolution, but that's how far you can zoom in the UI right now so you can't make the difference between two clips smaller than 1/128. I think the maximum edit resolution of the sequencer, and hence the minimum step is something like 1/128, so you can do some phasing-like things as well. have one clip 5/16, another 9/16 and a third one at 31/32 running polymetrically against each other for example. Even now with the 3.1 you can have different length clips running next to each other on separate tracks - you can eg. You can indeed sequence drums (and synths) on the Push, with a variety of views. Its a physical interface designed for, and tightly integrated with, Ableton Live. I think that's a more advanced use case though. As someone whos owned a Push 2 for a few years and just bought a Deluge (so I can ditch the PC), I would strongly recommend you look harder at the Push for your use case. Yes independent lengths within a kit is a feature of upcoming fw, so not official yet, just for beta testers The synthesizer is standalone and multipurpose integrating a.


Maybe a new firmware feature that had been added? Deluge is a flagship instrument of Synthstrom which went through 3 years of developing process.
