Editing in Live
Editing in Live
I've been demo'ing Live for some time now and I'm utterly impressed by the live/realtime vs sequencer/off-line integration.
For arranging I've been using AcidPro untill now a lot, because of the fairly intuitive GUI and the ability for in-line editing.
That's where my question kicks in :
Maybe I haven't found it yet, but is there a possibility to do some in-line editing of samples while in arranger/sequencer mode .
In acid I'm used to chop/slice/dice/mangle up my samples in order to arrange them but I don't seem to understand how this is done in Live ...
EG. say you have a 5 sec sample, and you have want to cut out pieces in this sample to obtain kinda stutter effect , can Live do this? (In acidPro it is quite trivial)...
Also, is there a way to (automatically) export/render the individual trax to wav for further mixdown in another environment?
If I could get around these 2 problems, I'm a buyer ... my way of producing just is screaming for this kind of productiontool .. have a look @ http://stage.vitaminic.com/sad_end_projects and you'll understand why...
For arranging I've been using AcidPro untill now a lot, because of the fairly intuitive GUI and the ability for in-line editing.
That's where my question kicks in :
Maybe I haven't found it yet, but is there a possibility to do some in-line editing of samples while in arranger/sequencer mode .
In acid I'm used to chop/slice/dice/mangle up my samples in order to arrange them but I don't seem to understand how this is done in Live ...
EG. say you have a 5 sec sample, and you have want to cut out pieces in this sample to obtain kinda stutter effect , can Live do this? (In acidPro it is quite trivial)...
Also, is there a way to (automatically) export/render the individual trax to wav for further mixdown in another environment?
If I could get around these 2 problems, I'm a buyer ... my way of producing just is screaming for this kind of productiontool .. have a look @ http://stage.vitaminic.com/sad_end_projects and you'll understand why...
cut/paste
I do lots of cutting and pasting and manipulation of clips in Live's arranger. It takes a minute or two to get used to it, but in practice its pretty simple. You can cut clips using command-E in conjunction with the quantize key commands to cut on beats or freely. And since each audio clip in the arranger is treated as a discrete entity, each "new" clip can have its own pitch and time-stretching settings. So a simple stutter can become a shifting organic singularity (if you want). You can then copy a section of clips and paste them into the session for bouncing down to a new slot. Or just bounce a looped section from the arranger into a new session slot. Pretty easy.
Problem numero uno solved!
Btester, thanx for already solving one vital issue for me.
How about the rendering (can't check this in the demo (saving disabled), and can't find it in the manual) : can I render every single track in arranger/sequencer mode as a seperate wav, preferably automagically ? This is purely for mixdown/mastering purposes
How about the rendering (can't check this in the demo (saving disabled), and can't find it in the manual) : can I render every single track in arranger/sequencer mode as a seperate wav, preferably automagically ? This is purely for mixdown/mastering purposes
well
There is no offline rendering in Live (maybe some day?). But you can easily bounce tracks from he arranger into new wav or aiff files by turning on loop for the section you want in the arranger and bouncing to a slot in the session. Then you just have to import these new files into your other audio sequencer (or back to Live).
Does that make sense?
Does that make sense?
-
- Posts: 5788
- Joined: Wed Nov 24, 2004 11:05 pm
- Location: Melbourne Australia
- Contact:
As far as I understood you have in fact several options to render tracks:
1. Master: obviously renders the master/mixed signal
2. Single track: renders a chosen single track
3. All tracks: renders all tracks seperately (in contrast to master) and is what you're most likely looking for
4. A Return, B Return: whatever
1. Master: obviously renders the master/mixed signal
2. Single track: renders a chosen single track
3. All tracks: renders all tracks seperately (in contrast to master) and is what you're most likely looking for
4. A Return, B Return: whatever