[RWP] definitely the easiest audio tempo control

Victor Tsaran vtsaran at gmail.com
Sun Mar 24 10:27:25 EDT 2013


Jim,
If you use Sonar 8.5 for your everyday production needs, then I'd stick with it for now. If you already upgraded to X2, then X2A will change things somewhat as far as accessibility is concerned.


Sent from my iPad

On Mar 23, 2013, at 7:25 PM, "Jim Snowbarger" <Snowman at SnowmanRadio.com> wrote:

> Are any of you guys using Sonar X2?  They  are pushing their upgrade offer.  gord talked about X2A.  Is that different than x2?  
>  
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Chris Belle
> To: Reapers Without Peepers
> Sent: Saturday, March 23, 2013 9:04 PM
> Subject: Re: [RWP] definitely the easiest audio tempo control
> 
> It takes a couple more steps in sonar to do audio stretching, but if you choose the of line radius options for tempo and time processing, the quality is a notch better than you get with reaper.
>  
> It's not too hard to do with audio snap in sonar, but the rendering takes a while, freezing your tracks before you export, and that's where the extra good quality comes in.
>  
> but elastique isn't too bad, way the hell better than sondforge's old stuff, or the older cakewalk stuf for sure.
>  
>  
>  
> For all your audio production needs and technology training, visit us at www.affordablestudioservices.com
> Chris Belle cb1963 at sbcglobal.net
> Stephie Belle sdb1961 at sbcglobal.net for customized web design
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Gordon Kent
> To: Reapers Without Peepers
> Sent: Saturday, March 23, 2013 5:28 PM
> Subject: [RWP] definitely the easiest audio tempo control
> 
> I had done a sketch of a project for a client of my friend up in Jersey who has a fully blown out studio and gives me a lot of work tracking for some of his clients.  They wanted it slowed down a bit.  Since I had cut a reference vocal on it, I really didn’t want to have to go back and do it again, and I had sent him audio tracks of just a bass, drum loop, and arpegiated synth.  I had done it in sonar, but I imported the wave files into a reaper project after setting the tempo to the same as the sonar version, then slowed it down from 142 to 135.  It worked like a charm, way easier than trying to accomplish the same thing in sonar where I would need to combine the clips and enable audio stretching in their properties.  I really like this program, even if you need to be a little geeky to use it.
> Gord
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