tobiaslindahl
Not sure I understand the purpose of thinking of 5 over 4 as 20/4 time signature?
So that you have, essentially, 20 clicks, or hash marks, however you want to think of them. The 5/4 rhythm will start on 1, 5, 9, 13 and 17, while the 4/4 rhythm will start on 1, 6, 11, and 16. This is the same as writing it out on paper, only doing it in the DAW allows you to hit "play" and actually hear what it should sound like, and you can slow it down and speed it up. One problem though is that there is nowhere to number the ticks, which I find very helpful when learning a particular polyrhythm.
tobiaslindahl
Best way to learn polyrythms is to expose yourself to them constantly, so they become as natural as four on the floor.
Right, like exposing yourself to them using your DAW. It's just an interesting technique I hadn't thought of that came from an awesome polyrhythmic drummer.
gswitz
Sonar has helped me immensely. I buy loops from groove monkey. I keep it simple.
You can use multiples of your time signature. Bounce to clip. Change your signature.
This is definitely not hard.
When you want to go back and forth, lock Tracks, buses and clips to absolute time rather than musical.
So imagine this...
Drop in 3.4 drum loop.
Bounce to track.
Lock.
Change time to 4.4
Drop in a 4.4 loop.
Bounce to track.
Lock.
Easy right?
Hmm...that's an interesting way of doing it. I'm going to try that tonight. Thanks for the tip.