Thanks for the reply. That video didn't seem to address changing individual notes by different amounts. But I've worked out how I'll do it using your first suggestion: first shift the whole track down 3 semitones, then drop those notes which are wrong by another 1 semitone.
Did you already print the reverb into the track, or is it natural reverb?Just realised it is impossible to do it because the reverb from the previous note still exists on top of the new note, so when you drop the new note the old note drops also which sounds terrible. I'll just have to record a new line with the right notes. Annoying.
Just realised it is impossible to do it because the reverb from the previous note still exists on top of the new note, so when you drop the new note the old note drops also which sounds terrible. I'll just have to record a new line with the right notes. Annoying.
This kind of thing would be super simple if you had the midi.
Great idea, but I’m not sure I’d trust it if the timing is super important and definitely not if the original velocity matters at all.1 Use Reatune...
Great idea, but I’m not sure I’d trust it if the timing is super important and definitely not if the original velocity matters at all.