![]() So you can tell Reaper to, say, play Region 1 once, Region 2 twice, and go back and play Region 1 once again before moving on to Region 3, irrespective of where those Regions exist on the project timeline. ![]() Regions are a bit like markers, except that they span a user-defined period of time, rather than simply marking a single point on the timeline, and the facility allows you to create ‘Playlists’ that can play back those Regions in any order you like. ![]() In a nutshell, it builds on Reaper’s ability to define separate ‘Regions’ on the project timeline. If you haven’t already installed the SWS Extensions for Reaper, then you really should barely a session goes by when I don’t find a useful new function in there: you can find them at This month, I want to take you through SWS’s ‘Region Playlists’ facility, which gives Reaper users lots of the functionality that the DAW world first saw in Cubase’s Play Order (now Arranger) Track. ![]() Reaper’s Region Playlists make it easy to sketch out new song structures or rework existing tracks. You can create regions in Reaper based either on the current timeline selection or, via some Actions, on the currently selected clips.
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