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S.L.I.P.

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Everything posted by S.L.I.P.

  1. A Band Called Death. The documentary is about the 1970s rock band Death and their new-found popularity decades after the group recorded their music. In their teenage years, the three brothers emerge as, first, a budding rock/funk band, heavily influenced by Motown & Parliament, ultimately evolving into pioneers of punk music.
  2. Dragging the audio clip to a midi track used to work like a charm, but for me, 9 out of 10 times Cakewalk/Sonar crashes. A safer bet is to right click on the audio clip and create a Region FX, and then drag the audio clip to the midi track. That has worked for me, every time.
  3. From the Cakewalk/Sonar Documentation: The Process > Fit to Time and Process > Fit Improvisation commands can also be used to introduce tempo changes into your work file. For more information, see Stretching and shrinking events and Fit Improvisation. https://www.cakewalk.com/Documentation?product=SONAR X2&language=3&help=Arranging.43.html
  4. I Dream of Wires https://www.imdb.com/title/tt3636334/videoplayer/vi2484253465?ref_=tt_ov_vi
  5. Thanks, Canopus! Carbon is absolutely gorgeous! I love that the tracks in console view are able to be fully colored!
  6. I'm running Kontakt 5.81. On the very top, to the left. you will seen the word, "Kontakt" To the right of that you will see a few icons. The first icon is the "Save" button. The second icon is the "Options" button, and right next to that is another button. Click on that button, and check "Info," and you will see the information that you seek.
  7. Thanks for the redundancy. I see why you had over 30, 000 posts!
  8. ABOUT THE FILM Music lovers will be astonished at the influence The Wrecking Crew wielded over rock and pop music in the 1960s and early 1970s. These unsung instrumentalists were the de-facto backing band on hit records by The Beach Boys, Phil Spector, Frank Sinatra, Nancy Sinatra, Sonny & Cher, Elvis, The Monkees and many more. These dedicated musicians brought the flair and musicianship that made the American “West Coast Sound” a dominant cultural force around the world.
  9. Look at the bottom left of Kontakt. see picture one. Click the little arrow to the right, and it will reveal where the library comes from. See picture two. (not sure why the picture came in so small, since it was three times bigger before upload)
  10. favorite jazz title of all time. E's Flat Ah's Flat Too Charles Mingus
  11. Excellent picture! An amazing show. One of the best things to watch on Netflix!
  12. Here's a step by step guide: click on the Wrench icon by the Instrument Name to open the Instrument Editor Select Instrument Options Select the Controller tab Un-check "Accept standard controllers for Volume and Pan"
  13. Please read my post. All you need to do is click on the wrench icon for the instrument you're working with, and uncheck accept standard controllers for volume and pan
  14. Turn off "Accept standard controllers for Volume and Pan" Click the wrench icon and uncheck accept standard controllers for volume and pan.
  15. Nice wall. Did Mexico pay for it?
  16. For more info check out this current thread: I think the files will be too big to email. I use my Google Drive for sending files to the people I'm working with. Arthur was right on, with the method of export.
  17. I recently did a project where I recorded the tracks in Cakewalk, and then I sent the stems to the recording studio for the vocal. What I did was export the file under the preset "Raw Tracks." Cakewalk exported all the tracks separately. I renamed each track, "bass, drums," etc, although if named properly in Cakewalk, the track name will automatically be the name of the exported file. In order for the tracks to line up when imported into another DAW, you would want to drag the beginning of the track to bar 1. In other words if your track starts at bar 1 with say, drums and bass, and the vocal comes in at bar 16, you would want to drag the empty part of the vocal to bar 1 so everything aligns in the imported DAW. It's possible Cakewalk will do it on its own, put I never tried it that way.
  18. Stems and Multitracks: What’s the Difference? by Phillip Nichols, iZotope Contributor January 5, 2017 Audio files are essential to modern audio production and are relied upon for successful collaboration, tracking, editing, mixing, remixing, and mastering. However, lack of proper file preparation or confusion about what files to use will net a lot of frustration and wasted time, money, and progress. Under the umbrella of audio files are two commonly used and confused kinds—multitracks and stems. Sure, both are audio files, but what’s the difference? Some people use “stems” and “multitracks” as interchangeable terms. Though they are related, they're not the same. Understanding the differences prevents mixups when it comes to requesting and sending files. What are multitracks? Multitracks are the recorded separate, individual elements of an audio production. Some may be mono, while others are stereo. They may have been recorded from microphones or direct inputs, programmed in a sequencer, or arranged in a sampler. In many cases, dynamics processors such as compressors and time-based effects such as delay and reverbare excluded to allow flexibility for the mixing engineer. The image below shows a folder of multitracks. Multitracks What are stems? Stems are stereo recordings sourced from mixes of multiple individual tracks. For example, a drum stem will typically be a stereo audio file that sounds like all of the drum tracks mixed together. In most cases, additional processing such as equalization, compression, and time-based effects is included to ensure that the sound achieved by the mixing engineer is committed. The image below shows a folder of stems generated from a mix of the multitrack files displayed in the previous image. Stems As you can see, multitrack sessions typically have far more tracks than stem sessions. Whereas the track counts in multitrack sessions range from twenty to a couple hundred, stem sessions may contain only four to twenty tracks. Multitrack sessions are created and expanded upon in the recording, editing, and mixing processes, while stem sessions are more commonly created after all the recording, editing, and mixing is finished—there are exceptions, of course.
  19. I'm not sure why this is your answer.
  20. I'll be happy to answer your question, when you tell me why you needed to "question," why the OP asked his QUESTION! JOHN: "I'm not sure why the question. But I have had no problems with Cakewalk. It works."
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