Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Hi,

I perform solo using my midi keyboard that I've programmed all the tracks and effects. Works great live. If my keyboard ever went out I always have audio files of the midi songs as backup.To make backup audio tracks from the midi  I have always just played the midi tracks and route the keyboard outs to a mono audio track then export audio. Has always worked great but the mix is not as clean as the live midi out of keyboard. This brings me to my question. I would like to play the midi tracks into a mono audio track but use compressor. I attached video showing all my midi tracks being recorded to mono audio track 19. How can I add compression while recording? or do I have to bounce to audio track then add compression?

Posted

99% of DAW's record the audio raw, i.e. unprocessed no affects added. FX get added post record, however if you enable input monitoring you can hear the effects in the FX bin or Pro Channel without printing them. Then you can tweak prior to the final mix down. 

Posted

Thanks for response and Happy Thanksgiving. I actually have all effects and and mix totally programmed from the korg keyboard. I just want to add compression when sending finished midi song to audio track.  I can route the keyboard line outs to an external compressor then into DAW and record the audio track. Was just trying to figure out how to do it within the DAW using compressor in Sonar instead of external compressor. Will be out for few days but will check in later.

Posted

Put the Compressor on the Master bus. When you're ready to bounce/export, set Buses as the source in the dialog, and choose the Master bus only. If the project has other buses, you can first Ctrl+Shift-Click the Master to clear all checkmarks and re-check the Master.

Incidentally, if done correctly, the sound of your rendered mix will not differ at all from live playback (assuming both are mono) unless you're playing it back through a different app or hardware or in a different environment.  If you're talking about it soundiing different through a mono amp in the performance venue than it does when listening to dual-mono monitoring in your studio, that's one thing, but the live and rendered digital signals should be identical.

Posted

When you say the audio quality is not very good that brings up a red flag. 

Are you using an audio interface or just some  an adapter cable into your computers line input. 

If so that would explain possible pour quality audio. Who knows what's going on there. They could have some sort of auto leveling as well as the quality of the A/D convertors will be questionable. I've owned a lot of different laptops as example and there can be a huge difference in the built in audio quality. 

And then a second red flag would be why are you thinking a compressor would solve this. 

You should be recording the tracks at a safe level, like -12db. After they are recorded you can easily adjust if needed. 

The way all Daw's work is the recorded audio will go directly to "tape" .  And the next question is do you want to squash the sound or simply limit its output? 

Possibly what you want is a Brickwall Limiter. like pro channel the concrete limiter.  

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...