Best Way to Flatten Return Tracks
Posted: Sun Oct 08, 2017 7:59 pm
Hey guys! Haven't been on the forums for a while, but I was hoping someone could share their insight with something I'm struggling with.
I've been using send and returns more and more with Ableton. I use a few hardware effects now and I'll normally just slap an external audio effect on the return so that I can use the same delay pedal with several different tracks, for instance.
The problem though, is when I want to commit this to recorded audio. Normally, working with some external gear, there comes a point to record what I've been working with such that I can have it ready to go without the external gear. Normally, say with an external instrument, I can just duplicate the track, freeze it, and flatten it so I can have all of the original midi information and a duplicate audio bounce of the same track.
With returns, however, you can't flatten those, so I'm not sure what the best approach should be. Should I have a track used to manually record the output of the returns as a temporary replacement to the return?
There's another issue I've been dealing with. Essentially, Ableton doesn't fully record the outputs of the returns until you either do so yourself with some workaround or export the audio. On in one song, however, as the song normally played, I would adjust a parameter on the delay pedal, but I can't do this when the song is rendering during export. Again, do I need to just create my own audio track to bounce the return audio to?
Any advice would really help, as this just seems to get pretty messy quickly with bouncing the audio.
Thanks,
Charlie
I've been using send and returns more and more with Ableton. I use a few hardware effects now and I'll normally just slap an external audio effect on the return so that I can use the same delay pedal with several different tracks, for instance.
The problem though, is when I want to commit this to recorded audio. Normally, working with some external gear, there comes a point to record what I've been working with such that I can have it ready to go without the external gear. Normally, say with an external instrument, I can just duplicate the track, freeze it, and flatten it so I can have all of the original midi information and a duplicate audio bounce of the same track.
With returns, however, you can't flatten those, so I'm not sure what the best approach should be. Should I have a track used to manually record the output of the returns as a temporary replacement to the return?
There's another issue I've been dealing with. Essentially, Ableton doesn't fully record the outputs of the returns until you either do so yourself with some workaround or export the audio. On in one song, however, as the song normally played, I would adjust a parameter on the delay pedal, but I can't do this when the song is rendering during export. Again, do I need to just create my own audio track to bounce the return audio to?
Any advice would really help, as this just seems to get pretty messy quickly with bouncing the audio.
Thanks,
Charlie