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Everything posted by Will.
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Can we fix Audio Snap? What's the purpose of working with Transient Makers? To move the information rather than stretching it right? So why is cakewalk stretching the note instead of moving it leaving you ending up with broken information. The besst work around is the old cut and nudge feature to avoid those robotic and glitches you end up with. Its almost like it slows the note down into low bit information. Audio Snap and Time stretch should not be one feature. ? Cakewalk forces one to record drums or guitars (sometimes guitars) in a different DAW. ? Luckily FL Studio is fully functional in trial mode except "SAVING" the project, but we're not suppose to run to another DAW for a simple task as this.
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Oh yeah! Your trial license must have expired.
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Indeed. This is a common problem in production. Let's hope for the best. ?
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Can we have the ability to replace audio sample with different samples without having to rebuild what you have. Example: If I want to replace a Clap with a Snare - i only want to be able to drag the snare on the track number, to replace the entire clap loop I had created before it was bounced into/as one clip in the track view. "Replace old with new" doesn't/never seem to work. It rather go sit on top of the previous/current sample.
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Just click on the audio clip to highlight it, loop the region (Shift+L) - press Ctrl+M and sit back.
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Yes. You do it like this - as i have explained above. Velocity_1.mp4
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I don't think It will. There's a question I've start asking these youngsters lately and it boggles my mind. So just out of curiosity i've been asking the millennials why they prefer Logic over PT. Craziest answer all the time - Logic looks better than ProTools. Apparently DAW appearanceis a thing too with them. Luckily only 1 told me Cakewalk looks dumb - sjoe! For real the answer with that question is always that PT looks out dated. Maybe you should ask your students about this between the appearance of your favourite DAWS which would they prefer using.
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By default: Left click on the mouse while hovering over the marker and holding the button in - press delete. By default "Q" is for quantization. Cakewalk has it own shortcut keybinding options by default for decades now like many other DAWs. We just need to learn them overtime.
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Yes you can. I'm nowhere near my home studio to attach screenshots. At the bottom left corner when in the Piano roll view - there's a little button to the control panel that looks like an eject button. Click it one's to mix it in with the notes or twice to have it separate. Also keep in mind. It's not the volume that you're changing - its the velocity of the notes (how fast the notes was hit.) Having the volume at random levels: This give you a humanized feeling to the track, which is what you always want, even in EDM. Click here to learn the Piano Roll View
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Gain reduction meter from some compressors on the channel strip
Will. replied to solarlux's topic in Feedback Loop
Basically yes. If you bring "clipping" into that equation? let it work as a true gain reduction meter - for that purpose? Don't know. Although my explanation here are moving slightly back to compression. ? You get the idea right? As an indication for overall channel gain reduction. -
Gain reduction meter from some compressors on the channel strip
Will. replied to solarlux's topic in Feedback Loop
What if it reads as an overall reduction meter for the channel? and not just for a certain plugin? Does it come down to the same coding problem? -
Accessing QUADCURVE EQUALIZER Panel from the Tiny EQ
Will. replied to murat k.'s topic in Feedback Loop
+1 for the original idea in this topic. -
Accessing QUADCURVE EQUALIZER Panel from the Tiny EQ
Will. replied to murat k.'s topic in Feedback Loop
You two that argue so about four bands sn eight bands - i bet: if both should get the same project to work on one will definitely use more thsn 4 bands because he picks more resonance than tbe other one. Your environment play's a huge role in this. There no right or wrong EQ. What works for you - works in your workflow. Even the top engineers never uses only 4 EQ bands | or | only one EQ on a guitar or vocals - depending on the song and vocalist even with the most perfect take ever. Piano for me is a great example in EDM. because EDM and Piano are so dynamic in their own ways - I hardly boost (depending on other elements around it) the piano. I often ending up doing a 10/12 band narrow cut to remove sharp resonance my "MONITORS" exposes to my in my "environment" to get tge piano sit perfectly its space without boosting. Same with vocals. Because certain recording environment are so well treated and its location its situated in - you sometimes end up with the mixing engineer just doing cuts abd not boosting any frequencies. All because of the feel of the song. If I want and "AIRY VOCAL" im just gona boost the highs and do narrow cuts in the mid and lower mid region. That normally gets me 6 bands excluding hi and low pass. Mixingis all about personal preferences. Inserting 3 EQ's is not wrong. Using 8 band not wrong. Mixing with only 4 bands not wrong at all. It all depends on genre and feel. If you want that Beatles feel . . . by all means use 3 Bands. Another Example that might not interest you. Take HIPHOP rappers most vocals are recorded in their bedrooms or open living rooms. Known hiphip producers here on uses two compressors (one with character and other linear, ) saturation and of course auto-tune sitting 1st in the chain. That alone gives a clear vocal with NO EQ. So you can stop arguing about 4 or 8 bands. I bet you in METAL you gona use more than 8 bands. Whether you use two EQ's with 4bands in the chain to get the sound you want - that's more than 4 bands you're using. Using the "hi pass and low pass filters" guess what? that's two extra bands you're using with your 4 bands. -
Definitely not a bad idea, but also a feature to remove the widgets to distinct it from the others - with the option to switch between stereo and a surround buss.
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Dude? That wasnt even directed your way. That's in reply to someone else.
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Woah. This is going to be a lot of graphic and cpu resources for those with limited systems. Imagine having 32 vocal takes on the chorus and that happens. ? with other tracks that has been grouped and automated. It would be awesome for us that are sorted with 32GB memory, 8GB graphic cards and i7-6th gen and up.
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"Hide/Disable/Delete" either way. Potato - Patato | Tamato - Tomato. ? Even if that feature can be added with a lock feature - Meaning: To stay in place.
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Dude . . . I'm not insulting you. Never did. "Dedicated" I've said it numerous times. It's in the topics heading too. Never insulted you. I meant well when I said read carefully.
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If you open the console and go to the "Module Tab" theres options to remove the widgets you dont want. Problem with this is - it's globally not per buss or per track. It's only the "Strips Volume" Meter that you can hide per buss or track.
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Wont the purpose of it be Stereo that why only the interleave will stay put. For when you do your A/B comparison in the Master process between mono and stereo? This is exactly why I brought this up. Cause I'm routing digitally in this sense. There's also a few steps and ideas digitally you're giving here with this - to work only with the CbB console in that sense. ☺ True not everyone works in CbB as advance as others. Some barely scratch the surface of CbB. That's why I sometimes go crazy here ? But that's because I use CbB to its full potential "digitally" and because there place for improvement.
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Thats why we create 2 or 3 Master tracks in the mixing process to control and balance out certain elements or to further create headroom space when giving the illusion something has been recorded "live" - when it was not. As for your "surround sound track" You that on the mix buss and Master it on your Dedicated Master track. That is why this will be an OPTION for you to choose and save it to your blank/empty template.
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Read carefully! The ability to "Disable/Hide" them (the controls) - is already there. That is what I said. Why would I want to do that? When the topic is to have a dedicated MASTER TRACK that cant be deleted. ?
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Hide it how? Meaning, how will that benefit the user? It can be hidden now, but I'm trying to understand how it will help.
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Thats already there. Why would I want to hide the features if a dedicated track tbat you can't delete would be a choice. If tracks are not highlighted by selecting them - your files don't get printed. A dedicated track prevents that too. You just need to wrap it with your loop markers.