[RWP] Routing Tracks to master track

Chris Belle cb1963 at sbcglobal.net
Mon May 20 04:18:59 EDT 2013


Patrick like you though I use reaper for just a few little things, I've 
chosen to stay with the 3.78 version for the better fit with the static 
access development, because nothing messes with work flow as much as not 
being able to do basic i/o stuff efficiently.

I always went for the latest versions before but I'm finding I can actually 
do stuff now with reaper and it actually does what I told it to do.

What good is a newer version if you can't get to things, or it breaks things 
that you had, and this is the worst kind of senario for new users, even old 
hats visiting a new set of tools.

I easily created a loop, tuned it and made it the speed I wanted, and 
exported it, and whala,
no extra space in the loop, no why the hell didn't that work, with 3.78 it 
just works and everything talks right.

Of course when I get in to more advanced functions, i might take my 
statement back, but for now I think I'll stay where your at.

Since you do lots of post production and have to do essential repetitive 
tasks real world
audio chores
I value your experience and I think your the only one maybe besides Roy
who I personally know who's actually doing work with reaper.

Not to take away from the explorations others are doing and talking about
but if there's a compelling reason to work with later versions and put up 
with the broken access, I haven't heard it yet.

Maybe the better midi editing?


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Patrick Perdue" <patrick at pdaudio.net>
To: "Reapers Without Peepers" <rwp at reaaccess.com>
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2013 9:25 PM
Subject: Re: [RWP] Routing Tracks to master track


> Everything should already be routed to master, unless you specifically 
> unrouted them all individually, or if your tracks are in a folder that 
> isn't sending to the master send itself. That's how the default new 
> project template works. All newly created tracks are automatically routed 
> to master. If you press shift+f5 (mute master track) and all your audio 
> goes away, then you'll know all your tracks are, in fact, sending to 
> master. You can also use shift+j or shift+k to read the peak meter of 
> left/right, respectively, of master track's output in real time. Assuming 
> you are using Reaper 3.78, where you can still fully access all the right 
> context menus for routing, unlike 4.x versions, pressing shift+context on 
> any highlighted track (it's a bit different for folders,) and one of the 
> options is "master track." Check or uncheck that box to route/unroute the 
> selected track from master here.
>
> On 5/19/2013 9:08 PM,
>
> Alexander Westphal wrote:
>> Hello all!
>>
>> I have a compressor on the master track, but how do I now route all my
>> tracks to the master?
>
>
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