macrae11 wrote:You don't have to. You have Sample Replacer! Way cooler than doing in manually. It only gives you three velocity layers, so you may have to go in an change some samples, but the tracking is pretty good, and once you get all the parameters tweaked up nicely, you can usually use them across an entire song, or sometimes multiple songs, so save your settings. Even when doing it manually, I usually only use three velocity layers, unless it's something very dynamic.
macrae11 wrote:Here's a quick tutorial on it. Sometimes I'll use Beat Detective, or Strip Silence to clean things up ahead of time if there's a lot of bleed.
http://www.musictechtutorials.com/pro-t ... -replacer/
macrae11 wrote: The simplest way is to select the tempo in the transport section and hit the 't' key to the tempo. You have to be in manual tempo mode though.
Mathieu Benoit wrote:Question: Any reason that Pro Tools would be trying to access the backup drive...
The Internets wrote: "IMPORTANT! You MUST use a secondary hard drive (not your main OS drive) for recording and playback of audio in Pro Tools. Recording or playback from the OS drive is known to be problematic and the cause of many different error types. If you are using your system drive and encountering errors, the first thing you should do is get a compatible drive."
Jef wrote:Mathieu Benoit wrote:Question: Any reason that Pro Tools would be trying to access the backup drive...
(just a guess...) Could it be that ProTools automatically searches your computer to see if any other drives are present and then selects one that doesn't have an operating system installed on it and uses that as its default storage location?
Jef wrote:..forgot to add that snippit
macrae11 wrote:Pro tools scans all available drives attached to you system. That's what the digidesign database folders are on every partition. What you need to do is go into the workspace browser (opt+;) and make the drive non PT Accesible. You do that by changing the letter next to the drive from an R for record to a T for transfer. There's also P for playback only which things like NTFS drives on macs default to. There's a column for audio and video so you can change both.
macrae11 wrote:This should solve your problem, although it could be an OS problem not a PT problem and you just happen to notice it when PT is running because it uses a lot of resources. Try that first though and then see what happens n
macrae11 wrote:Did it work?
Or just option click on it... Or just select it and delete it...Mathieu Benoit wrote:Nick and I just figured out last night how erase a location marker. What a PITA that was... Command+5, I'll never forget it.
Two main ways I do this. First way is the way you suggested, just create a duplicate playlist, name it, or make a comment, and consolidate. The two commands for playlists are (I think) Control+\ for New, and Control+Option+\ for Duplicate.Mathieu Benoit wrote:Anyways, moving on... So let's say I have a gazillion edits in my current playlists and I want to consolidate everything after I'm 98% sure my edits are good. I do however want to make sure I can go back and fix things if I need to. How would you do that? I'm thinking of simply duplicating the playlist and then consolidating the duplicate. Would that be the best way to achive this? Also did they ever create a shortcut for "new playlist" and "duplicate playlist"?
macrae11 wrote: Or just select it and delete it...
macrae11 wrote:Two main ways I do this. First way is the way you suggested, just create a duplicate playlist, name it, or make a comment, and consolidate. The two commands for playlists are (I think) Control+\ for New, and Control+Option+\ for Duplicate.
The second way, if I'm a little less sure that my edits are perfect is to group the regions. Basically that turns all the independent regions, fades and gaps into one large region. The nice thing is it's 100% non destructive. Command+Option+G to create the group, Command+Option+U to undo the group. Another cool thing is that you can create region groups across multiple tracks, so if you just want to do some moving to a whole drum kit, but don't have all the edits done, you can group all the tracks, move things around, then ungroup.
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