I am starting on a big piece for full orchestra, plus two pianos, made of all EastWest synths, plus hopefully a live soloist or possibly two. The piece will probably be more than half an hour. As it is currently planned, there will be no musical breaks. There will be separate movements, but the plan is to bridge these movements with interludes and vamps and sound effects and such, so no silence at any time, and no natural breaks. Also, this project will be the final product, and will be published in CD form and be on Spotify and all those places exactly how it is exported from Cakewalk. I'm the whole show. Which means I am also going to need to EQ every track at the minimum, make volume and expression envelopes everywhere, all that. So more processing.
So, while I'm starting to plan this thing musically, I'm starting to think about how I should organize it in Cakewalk. I know that if I decide to make the whole piece one single project, that it will get really sluggish before long, weighed down by stuff I'm not currently even working on. However, if I split it up into logical musical movements, (the way it will ultimately divided into tracks on the CD no doubt), then it will be a major PITA to ensure the transitions are seamless.
Lastly, much of the music for this piece already exists in old CW projects from years ago, so there will likely be a desire for cutting and pasting entire chunks right into this new thing from the old projects.
How do people handle this typically? I've been a CW user since 1989, but my pieces have always been either easily breakupable into separate projects because they had natural breaks, or if not they were small ensembles. But even at that, occasionally I've started getting sluggish, and so now I'm thinking that's just going to be a huge problem if I don't plan this out now before I embark on this thing. I have Audacity and Audition also, but the way Adobe changed Audition a while back confuses me and I hate it, and I haven't needed to use Audacity for much anyway, so instead just do almost everything in CW now, so there's that little snag too.
Question
jkoseattle
I am starting on a big piece for full orchestra, plus two pianos, made of all EastWest synths, plus hopefully a live soloist or possibly two. The piece will probably be more than half an hour. As it is currently planned, there will be no musical breaks. There will be separate movements, but the plan is to bridge these movements with interludes and vamps and sound effects and such, so no silence at any time, and no natural breaks. Also, this project will be the final product, and will be published in CD form and be on Spotify and all those places exactly how it is exported from Cakewalk. I'm the whole show. Which means I am also going to need to EQ every track at the minimum, make volume and expression envelopes everywhere, all that. So more processing.
So, while I'm starting to plan this thing musically, I'm starting to think about how I should organize it in Cakewalk. I know that if I decide to make the whole piece one single project, that it will get really sluggish before long, weighed down by stuff I'm not currently even working on. However, if I split it up into logical musical movements, (the way it will ultimately divided into tracks on the CD no doubt), then it will be a major PITA to ensure the transitions are seamless.
Lastly, much of the music for this piece already exists in old CW projects from years ago, so there will likely be a desire for cutting and pasting entire chunks right into this new thing from the old projects.
How do people handle this typically? I've been a CW user since 1989, but my pieces have always been either easily breakupable into separate projects because they had natural breaks, or if not they were small ensembles. But even at that, occasionally I've started getting sluggish, and so now I'm thinking that's just going to be a huge problem if I don't plan this out now before I embark on this thing. I have Audacity and Audition also, but the way Adobe changed Audition a while back confuses me and I hate it, and I haven't needed to use Audacity for much anyway, so instead just do almost everything in CW now, so there's that little snag too.
Link to comment
Share on other sites
8 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Please sign in to comment
You will be able to leave a comment after signing in
Sign In Now