myhatbroke
Cocktacular Member
i don't have time TELE!TelePaul said:Why dont you try it and see Hat!!
edit:what the hell is taking you so long travis?
i don't have time TELE!TelePaul said:Why dont you try it and see Hat!!
myhatbroke said:i don't have time TELE!
edit:what the hell is taking you so long travis?
Yea i understand that but what I'm asking is if the processed signal comes back to my interface or does it go to the pc sounds card. Cus my when my interface is hooked up, my pc soundcard get's deactivated.TelePaul said:Okay you have to do SOME of the work. What Ideally will happen si that if you apply reverb to a track, you'll hear reverb when you monitor through Cubase. Depending on your sound card, there might be latency (the time it takes to input the sound, process it, and output it).
myhatbroke said:Yea i understand that but what I'm asking is if the processed signal comes back to my interface or does it go to the pc sounds card. Cus my when my interface is hooked up, my pc soundcard get's deactivated.
Ahh I see. But the disadvantage is that it'll lag, correct?TelePaul said:Everything will go through your interface, it'll come out your monitors/headphones.
myhatbroke said:Ahh I see. But the disadvantage is that it'll lag, correct?
Oh and another thing, what is the diff. between using an interface and a Mixer with a usb connection?
it has two inputs. It also has the loop thing but thats it. Oh and a headphone output and left and right 1/4 outputs.TelePaul said:It MAY lag...the extent to which it does depends on the processes running and your sound card. It'll probably be workable if you're using an ASIO driver.
Well how many inputs does your lambda have? I THINK some USB mixers have seperate outs....meaning you can route a mixer channel to its own Cubase track (like having 8/12/16 whatever inputs on your interface). Thats only my thought, I'm not 100% sure.
myhatbroke said:it has two inputs. It also has the loop thing but thats it. Oh and a headphone output and left and right 1/4 outputs.
And yea, I like that about having a mixer. They are basically the same price yet they have more channels,eqs and faders. So why did I get an interface?? Whats the advantage
myhatbroke said:i don't have time TELE!
edit:what the hell is taking you so long travis?
well you have to explain what an insert and a send is to meTravisinFlorida said:I'm slow. You'll likely read my tutorial so what does that say about you?
Seriously, I still have a long way to go. Myhatbroke, to monitor a live input with effects, go to Devices > Device Setup > VST Multitrack > Setup tab and make sure Direct Monitoring is unchecked. Make sure the Monitor button (speaker icon) is on.
Is this diagram understandable for explaining Inserts and Sends?
What did you just say?TravisinFlorida said:Hit Points are essentially markers that let you chop up audio. For example, you have imported a sample from vinyl, say an area of the record that only contains a drum beat. Hit points attempt to automatically detect the transients in the drum beat for easy slicing. It's basically just an easy way to slice up audio. I've never needed to use it myself. I won't cover anything that I haven't used myself. I don't want to put a bunch of bad info out there.
Well I wouldn't want to mic drums but I'd like to have 3 mics at once for my amp. And later on, I'd like to just have all the mics set permanently, and that would take a few channels.TelePaul said:I don't think they're the same price. If they are, the Pres are probably shit on them. Your Lambda and my Tascam I think are intended for singer-songwriters...you'd wanna be crazy to try and track a drum kit. You have me curious about USB mixers though....hmm. Should you post about it in the newbie forum? Or should I?
When you first start the project it asks you where you want to save it.true-eurt said:Okay...here is something that has me pulling out my hair. How do I split the tracks I record up? Say I recorded bass, vox and click track...how do I save each track individually before I mix down?
Also, I know that cubase automatically saves the projects, but I cannot find where. I looked in my folders and nothing? Only the ones I mixed down..
I'm sure it is simple, but my bwain is apparently more simple.
Yeah, I am manual handicapped.
true-eurt said:Okay...here is something that has me pulling out my hair. How do I split the tracks I record up? Say I recorded bass, vox and click track...how do I save each track individually before I mix down?
Also, I know that cubase automatically saves the projects, but I cannot find where. I looked in my folders and nothing? Only the ones I mixed down..
I'm sure it is simple, but my bwain is apparently more simple.
Yeah, I am manual handicapped.
But whats the point in that? Unless she wants to send her vox to someone seperately.TelePaul said:You might have to export them as their own audio file and laod em that way. Hi True!!
myhatbroke said:But whats the point in that? Unless she wants to send her vox to someone seperately.
myhatbroke said:well you have to explain what an insert and a send is to me
myhatbroke said:Ahh I see. But the disadvantage is that it'll lag, correct?
Oh and another thing, what is the diff. between using an interface and a Mixer with a usb connection?
true-eurt said:What did you just say?
Yes Hat..I know there is an audio folder...nothing is in it.myhatbroke said:When you first start the project it asks you where you want to save it.
When you record, all those wav files are being saved in the audio folder.
And why do you want to save each individually? That's pointless, it beats the purpose of having a multi track software.