Oh no..?ermi wrote:Hypertone: I understand exactly what you mean.
I made a similar topic here not long ago.
There's just no such thing as a decent free(or even very cheap) audio editor, which *should* have VST support, IMO...
Look here.


Oh no..?ermi wrote:Hypertone: I understand exactly what you mean.
I made a similar topic here not long ago.
There's just no such thing as a decent free(or even very cheap) audio editor, which *should* have VST support, IMO...


I'm not enough of an audio engineer to argue this point effectively, but my alarm bells ARE going off that it's vaguely opinion and hear-say like, rather than factual.BONES wrote:Normalising is essential to ensure the maximum use of available bit-depth. If you are not normalising your audio you have wasted bit-depth which equals lower quality.
Actually, I forgot that one on my list-- I DO use my editor's normalise function, but I don't do it at the mastering stage, I do it at the mixing stage.... except normalising.Lunch Money wrote: There's not a thing in a "mastering" checklist of things to-do that an editor can do better, except perhaps export to a variety of file types, which to me is NOT part of the mastering process.
Actually, because your editor is not real-time it will always use 100% of availble resources to do things as quickly as possible.To master in your audio editor would take the same amount of resources unless you have already rendered a stereo "mixdown" from your host.
Right. I'm not sure if we're on the same side or debating a point here.TBH I use CE2k far less now that I used to but I still think that there are too many things that it does better to ever consider being without. But what my host offers is the ability to do many things that may once have tempted me to spend big bucks on WaveLab or Audition to get through. Its just a matter of thinking things through a little more to come up with optimum workflows.
Did nobody notice this or am I just feeding the fire? Sorry if I am. God damn.BabyaSoftwareGr wrote:Logic 2006 is a free audio production suite:
http://www.winsite.com/bin/Info?26000000037648
I'm sure it was mentioned in this topic already, but sequencers like SX3 can do normalising and similar simple tasks, offline as well (non realtime). Also, as has also already been mentioned in this thread the main advantages in using an editor are interface/'workflow' related, and IMO the SX3 audo editing interface is intentionally left in an unrefined state in order to leave sales figures for Wavelab as unaffected as possible.BONES wrote: ... except normalising.
Since when was $99 "free"?Andywanders wrote:Oh no..?ermi wrote:Hypertone: I understand exactly what you mean.
I made a similar topic here not long ago.
There's just no such thing as a decent free(or even very cheap) audio editor, which *should* have VST support, IMO...
Look here.
The rest here.Rip Rowan at Prorec.com wrote:Normalizing is a strange word that simply means “increase the volume of the signal by whatever amount is needed to bring the highest peak up to 0 dB, full-scale. Normalizing audio during a CD transfer is simply an easy way to get the audio as loud as it can be without changing the dynamics whatsoever. From an audiophile point of view it is the proper technique to get the hottest signal on CD with no distortion of the signal at all.
That's eactly what I mean/do, yes. (It is exportingLunch Money wrote: I don't "export" files to normalise per se... I guess technically they are... maybe...? But I launch my editor from within Tracktion, normalise, and they update inside of Tracktion without even closing it. Close the editor and continue along.
I sometimes use the clip gain slider in Live to save time (and the waveform grows as you do it so you see whether it will clip or notHowever, I'm finding this current method of using the clip gain slider (not even the internal "normalise" function of Tracktion, which is buried in menus) to be pretty effective and efficient so far.
Wavesurgeon Basic $35kovacs wrote:Since when was $99 "free"?Andywanders wrote:Oh no..?ermi wrote:There's just no such thing as a decent free(or even very cheap) audio editor, which *should* have VST support, IMO...
Look here.
Submit: News, Plugins, Hosts & Apps | Advertise @ KVR | Developer Account | About KVR / Contact Us | Privacy Statement
© KVR Audio, Inc. 2000-2026