@Another User said:
I did read your post which is still not as clear as it could be.
Gee, and I've been thinking all along that I did a pretty good job! [:)]
The answer to your question is that you play each note normally, i.e. you hold it down as long as you want it to sound, ||: then play the next one and hold it as long as you want it to sound : || You *could* hold down the key and play the whole recorded performance of several notes, but then you're limited to that exact recording, plus the software is going to play the next program set up in the Repetition Tool next time you play a key. It's sort of like eating bark: you certainly could, but why would you want to?
Put another way, the repetition tool is switching programs every time you play a key. These programs essentially start with successive (or different) notes in the recorded performance of several notes. So if you play the notes one by one, you're triggering the next program at your tempo, not the recorded tempo.
Again, if you play too slowly, the next note in the recorded performance is going to sound whenever it wants (i.e. as it was recorded, which will be early), so you have to play faster than the recorded tempo for this to work. Or you can play at the recorded tempo; you just can't play slower, or the recording will get ahead of you. Conversely, you can't play so fast that the notes overlap because they're too long.
The objects of the exercise are to avoid playing the exact same note with every repetition and also to capture the transitions between notes.
Make more sense now? Or should I switch careers?