I finaly hit track limitations and getting clipping cos the HD isnt fast enough to cope with my over use of tracks.
Anyhoo. What I really wanted to ask is what is the best way for me to temporarily bounce down to a stereo pair?
Cheers,
JV
There are actually 2 different ways you can achieve this: select all the tracks together and hit freeze, or route the tracks to a sub-group and freeze the group.. I do the second one usually as I tend to use a lot of sub-groups in my mixes: Its much quicker to select a single group track than to <cntrl> select mulitple source tracks, but you do need to be careful not to try to edit the originals while the group is frozen.. it will let you do it, but you won't hear the changes till you unfreeze!valley wrote:So if you are running out of HD throughput, freezing a group (I.E. more than one) of tracks will temporarily turn them all into one single track.
1. Depends what you mean by easy!jv2222 wrote:1) Do you think tracktion would easily be able to work with 100 tracks? (I mean in terms of display rather than disk access)
2) Is there any way to group tracks into folders like in 'some other' software...?
Cheers,
JV
Yes.rpc9943 wrote:wait so when you output tracks to a blank buss track you can freeze that and it will freeze all concerned?
RonC
Also its really usful to do things like compress or eq your group. (ahh wouldnt folders work nicley here) I find this works great for tracks with lots of backing vocals. You can make the backing vocals more or less dense, or prominant, without increasing volume by group compressing.IIRs wrote:Yes.rpc9943 wrote:wait so when you output tracks to a blank buss track you can freeze that and it will freeze all concerned?
RonC
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