Home Recording

Go Back   Home Recording > User Forums by Brand > Cubase User Forum


        

                                
                                10/30 - [video] Demo Roland TD-20SX
Reply    Audiofanzine Steinberg Steinberg News Steinberg Medias Steinberg Tests Steinberg Articles Steinberg User Reviews Steinberg Classifieds Ads
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 10-26-2002
jb4play's Avatar
jb4play jb4play is offline
Pimp
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Covington, GA
Age: 25
Posts: 239
Rep Power: 0
jb4play is infamous around these partsjb4play is infamous around these partsjb4play is infamous around these partsjb4play is infamous around these partsjb4play is infamous around these parts
Exclamation Does This Make Sense?

Hi? I'm a young producer of Rap and R&b and I have a question. Ok... here goes... I use Cubase SX 1.03 as a HD recorder/midi station/mixin platform/mastering utility, so from the beginning to the end my music is in the digital domain. I've been tracking my Akai Mpc 2k XL tracks, Reason tracks, and vocals mainly at 32/44.1 with true tape at +6db for the longest. But a thought came to my head. WHY!!! This is my new way of approaching things. The Akai MPC 2k XL's convertors can only toss out sounds at 16 bits, so I decided from now on I'm goin to record MPC tracks at 16 bits in cubase, track my vocals at 24 bits, and any tracks within reason that are already 24 bits will be tracked at 24 bits, if not, they will be tracked at 16 bits( I bus the outs of reason out the back of my card into the front so Its like i'm recording reason sounds like an external keyboard, gives it that hardware sound so it doesn't sound like software all the time). My problem is... is this reasonable? Mixing 16 bit and 24 bit files within cubase? and after mixing i'm plannin on downmixin at 32 bits so I can reload them into cubase or wavelab to master, or down mix at 24 bits if I'm sendin the track to an outside masterer who can't work at 32 bits. PLZ let me know if this sounds like it will work. thx
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 10-28-2002
lomky lomky is offline
So much to learn
 
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Age: 36
Posts: 405
Rep Power: 1703
lomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond reputelomky has a reputation beyond repute
You cannot mix bit rate or sample rate in Cubase.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 10-28-2002
Blue Bear Sound's Avatar
Blue Bear Sound Blue Bear Sound is offline
Don't feed the bear......
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Ottawa, ON, Canada
Age: 44
Posts: 12,897
Rep Power: 215
Blue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond reputeBlue Bear Sound has a reputation beyond repute
Not only that, but 32-bit is an internal CUbase representation used for higher-res processing.... the files remain at 24-bit..... there's no such thing as 32/44.1, 32/48, 32/88.2, 32/96 files outside of Cubase and other s/w that uses higher internal word sizes.
Reply With Quote
Reply



Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump
Google
 


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 10:36.


Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995-2008 Audiofanzine except where noted. All Rights Reserved.