J
jennajenna
New member
I am working with sampled piano tracks (Gigastudio) so dense that each one is made up of as many as 8 thinner piano tracks mixed together in Sound Forge. The finished tracks will eventually be brought together in Sonar. It is taking forever because I'm working in 24-96 and each track is 30 minutes long.
For some reason, even though Sound Forge is set to DC adjust while recording the SPDIF signal from the Gigastudio computer, each sub-track fails to generate a reading of -inf when scanned for 'average value' by Forge's statistics function. This is easily corrected after the fact by 'automatically detecting and removing DC offset.'
I am finding it hard to resist adjusting each sub-track after it's been recorded, then each pair after they've been mixed together and on and on.
Can over-dithering a track (by dithering each of its sub-tracks individually) cause damage? Or do sub-tracks with an apparent DC offset not mix well?
Or should I not even be thinking about any of this so early in the project?
If anyone is still reading, or reading at all, one more thing- How do these levels sound for one of the recorded piano tracks (it's a classical-type piece in 24-96): the quiet notes peaking at about -30 db, the overall peak being -4 db. Any thoughts?
For some reason, even though Sound Forge is set to DC adjust while recording the SPDIF signal from the Gigastudio computer, each sub-track fails to generate a reading of -inf when scanned for 'average value' by Forge's statistics function. This is easily corrected after the fact by 'automatically detecting and removing DC offset.'
I am finding it hard to resist adjusting each sub-track after it's been recorded, then each pair after they've been mixed together and on and on.
Can over-dithering a track (by dithering each of its sub-tracks individually) cause damage? Or do sub-tracks with an apparent DC offset not mix well?
Or should I not even be thinking about any of this so early in the project?
If anyone is still reading, or reading at all, one more thing- How do these levels sound for one of the recorded piano tracks (it's a classical-type piece in 24-96): the quiet notes peaking at about -30 db, the overall peak being -4 db. Any thoughts?

Even as a newbie I do know what it means. I wrote my post very late and I meant to say something like 'Is it possible to over-DC-offset-correct the clips being mixed together to form a track? Where is it coming from- does it adversely affect the track being built (i.e. if 4 tracks with a DC offset are mixed together, does the resulting track have a quadruple DC offset?) Or does it matter at all.