
Hope you get DM sorted

i understand what you mean, but i always pefer to do the job to a new audio track muting the bad recording, but i never trash the recorded material.On 2005-12-23 16:36, katano wrote:
djmicron,
imagine you have for example a vocal track, mostly fine. but you want to record some sequences again (overdub), because the singer wasn't in tune or what ever.
ok, now you want to hear the recorded voice till the point you're not happy with, this is the mark where punchin takes the role and record starts. after punchin, you will agree, it makes no sense at all to hear the bad recorded sequence while the singer is singing the new take.
ergo, it doesn't make sense to use another track to record this sequence again, even if we're able to use hundreds of tracks in our DAWs...
hmmpff, difficult for me to explain it in english, hope it makes sense to you
greez and happy xmas!!
roman
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: katano on 2005-12-23 16:40 ]</font>
i agree,On 2005-12-23 20:04, garyb wrote:
cubase playback is in the mixer, monitored. the source is in the mixer, monitored. they are in the same time zone(the scope mixer) and so latency is not an issue. there's no reason to switch between playback and liver monitoring as i cut out the section to be replaced anyway(an edit that only takes a moment), but even still, cubase mutes the track when it's in record, so it doesn't matter anyway. likewise with sonar, logic and any other sequencer. direct monitoring actually is more annoying, because then latency IS an issue......i do this ALL the time and for money, no problem, no direct monitoring, no complaints from clients.
now, i agree with that, but i wonder, what native plug could possibly be so important as to need recording at the tracking stage? effects are best applied to recorded tracks. i'm not trying to tell anyone how they must work, however. do what is most fit to the end result in your own opinion......On 2005-12-24 03:40, djmicron wrote:
It has sense if we apply for example some native plug in realtime during the recording.
garyb, how much latency are we talking about, when using asio2 direct monitoring? I always thought asio2 direct monitoring is latency free? *confused-again*On 2005-12-23 20:04, garyb wrote:
cubase playback is in the mixer, monitored. the source is in the mixer, monitored. they are in the same time zone(the scope mixer) and so latency is not an issue. there's no reason to switch between playback and liver monitoring as i cut out the section to be replaced anyway(an edit that only takes a moment), but even still, cubase mutes the track when it's in record, so it doesn't matter anyway. likewise with sonar, logic and any other sequencer. direct monitoring actually is more annoying, because then latency IS an issue......i do this ALL the time and for money, no problem, no direct monitoring, no complaints from clients.