Rico Putra Posted yesterday at 05:07 AM Posted yesterday at 05:07 AM Can Sonar Do This? and will sonar Have This Voice Feature? Because I Think Sonar Started Just Far Behind but if sonar already can do this, can someone tell me how?
Promidi Posted yesterday at 10:31 AM Posted yesterday at 10:31 AM 5 hours ago, Rico Putra said: Can Sonar Do This? If you want to put a feature request in, do it here: https://discuss.cakewalk.com/forum/8-feedback-loop/
msmcleod Posted yesterday at 11:36 AM Posted yesterday at 11:36 AM Sonar has no in-built audio editor, but you can easily add one to the utilities menu - by editing the registry using regedit. Just create a new key under Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Cakewalk Music Software\Tools Menu and add ExePath, MenuTest and Type string values. This is an example for Sound Forge 12: To use it, just select a clip then select "Sound Forge 12" (or whatever you're using) from the Utilities menu. Sound Forge will fire up with your clip loaded. You then edit, save then exit, and Sonar will pick up the modified wave file. 3
Xoo Posted yesterday at 11:40 AM Posted yesterday at 11:40 AM Also, if you have a plug-in that can do this (Sound Forge used to come with various such), you can apply that to a snippet of audio or entire clips in Sonar.
Bass Guitar Posted yesterday at 03:54 PM Posted yesterday at 03:54 PM (edited) Actually I have Steinberg Wave Lab 12 set up in the tools. But honestly over time I rarely use it because I use Melodyne for surgery on my audio tracks. Clicks and pops are pretty obvious. Edited 19 hours ago by Bass Guitar
Rico Putra Posted yesterday at 04:06 PM Author Posted yesterday at 04:06 PM but the built in feature is sounds "must" in this era, pro tools can do this, cubase can do this, so why till now, sonar not bring in inside? if u see the example video, they work flawlessly, no need much do this do that, just ready proces in the box, hope this can happening soon in cakewalk, just saying
timboalogo Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago I don't think it's a "must", if you were recording properly you shouldn't have recorded the clicks and crackles in the first place. My 2 cents. 2 1 1
Bonzos Ghost Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago You can get rid of the tick with a volume envelope on the clip. Pretty simple. If you're getting pops & clicks then you might have an issue that needs to be resolved as that shouldn't happen with a fine tuned Windows pc optimized for daw use. How low is your audio interface buffer? Install a free DPC Latency checker tool. If you're seeing spikes on the graph then that indicates an issue. There should no spikes on the graph at all. Also, do you have "core parking" disabled? That's a "must do" tweak for any Windows daw to optimize performance under low latency settings. You need to disable it by going under the hood into the registry. Could be several things that might cause a pop/click, but if you do the required Windows tweaks and (hopefully) are using a dedicated pc strictly for daw use, then pops & clicks should not happen. 1
Recommended Posts
Please sign in to comment
You will be able to leave a comment after signing in
Sign In Now