Glad I finally upgraded. I regret not jumping on the option to upgrade for $149 USD when I first got Studio One back in the day, but I'll settle for $199 USD right now.
Anyone else jumping on Editor, Studio, or Assistant?
If you log into your Celemony account, it will be available in the upgrades section (you have to click through the "buy" option and scroll down for upgrades). Otherwise, you can get it at AudioDeluxe:beatmangler443 wrote:Where did you get that price from? Also, how long does that sale last? Thanks.
That's not been my experience at all. If I import a full song (say for instance, a track I want to create a tempo map from in order to do a remix, etc), it scans and detects the tempo, and creates the map. Then you can tweak or adjust it as you like:keyman_sam wrote:I still haven't figured out how to change file tempo AFTER importing the file. It was easy in v2, not so in v4. The whole thing is geared towards the assumption that the audio files brought in have been sung to freestyle without any tempo info.
That's exactly what I DON'T want. I want to specify my own tempo without it altering anything. That's 99% of my use case where arrangements have been already done to tempo.EnochLight wrote:That's not been my experience at all. If I import a full song (say for instance, a track I want to create a tempo map from in order to do a remix, etc), it scans and detects the tempo, and creates the map. Then you can tweak or adjust it as you like:keyman_sam wrote:I still haven't figured out how to change file tempo AFTER importing the file. It was easy in v2, not so in v4. The whole thing is geared towards the assumption that the audio files brought in have been sung to freestyle without any tempo info.
Also, just type your desired base tempo into the BPM box up top...
If you already know your base tempo, open Melodyne Editor, enter the base tempo info, time signature/grid into the transport's BPM box up top, turn off auto-stretch (the button to the right of the BPM data box), and then import your audio track. Melodyne automatically reads wav data that has embedded tempo info (such as Apple Loops), though.keyman_sam wrote:That's exactly what I DON'T want. I want to specify my own tempo without it altering anything. That's 99% of my use case where arrangements have been already done to tempo.EnochLight wrote: Also, just type your desired base tempo into the BPM box up top...
If I enter the desired base tempo into the BPM box it will change the tempo, not assign it. I want to assign tempo.
Yes, that's what I do. That's my point - it doesn't let you assign constant tempo after importing, without modifying anything whereas v2 had it.EnochLight wrote:If you already know your base tempo, open Melodyne Editor, enter the base tempo info, time signature/grid into the transport's BPM box up top, turn off auto-stretch (the button to the right of the BPM data box), and then import your audio track. Melodyne automatically reads wav data that has embedded tempo info (such as Apple Loops), though.keyman_sam wrote:That's exactly what I DON'T want. I want to specify my own tempo without it altering anything. That's 99% of my use case where arrangements have been already done to tempo.EnochLight wrote: Also, just type your desired base tempo into the BPM box up top...
If I enter the desired base tempo into the BPM box it will change the tempo, not assign it. I want to assign tempo.
Also, make sure to right-click on the time-stretch box and enable "assign tempo".
Huh? yes it does - after you import your audio, turn on time stretch and adjust your tempo. It will adjust accordingly. Or am I misunderstanding what you mean by constant tempo?keyman_sam wrote:Yes, that's what I do. That's my point - it doesn't let you assign constant tempo after importing, without modifying anything whereas v2 had it.
Yes that's what i want. In summary : I have an audio file which I KNOW is 132 BPM. I import it in Melodyne, it says tempo is 65 or whatever, I don't care. I just want to assign 132 to it and start working. CAN'T do that!EnochLight wrote:Huh? yes it does - after you import your audio, turn on time stretch and adjust your tempo. It will adjust accordingly. Or am I misunderstanding what you mean by constant tempo?keyman_sam wrote:Yes, that's what I do. That's my point - it doesn't let you assign constant tempo after importing, without modifying anything whereas v2 had it.
Constant tempo = fixed tempo, correct?
*EDIT: wait, I think I understand what you're saying. Yes, in version 4 you have to tell Melodyne that you want to import with auto-tempo detection turned off, if you want that "feature". V2 didn't have auto tempo detection, though, correct? I came aboard after 2.0, so I don't remember.
To be clear - YES - you can still do this perfectly fine in 4.0. You just have to tell Melodyne to not do auto-tempo detection first. It's not that big of a deal, really (taking into consideration the added benefit of tempo editing as well).keyman_sam wrote: Yes that's what i want. In summary : I have an audio file which I KNOW is 132 BPM. I import it in Melodyne, it says tempo is 65 or whatever, I don't care. I just want to assign 132 to it and start working. CAN'T do that!
This worked perfectly fine in v2. I DONT want any time stretching, just normal vocal pitch correction.
Thanks for support Celemony!Hello,
I am sorry to say, but Melodyne editor 2 is discontinued since the release of version 4 early this year.
With best wishes,
Ulf Kaiser
You were seeking support on a version of software that's 2 versions behind the current one... not to mention, it came out over 9 years ago. I mean, it sucks that you never got a response from your first request 2.5 years ago, but did you follow up at all?krandr wrote:I have a Melodyne Editor crash both on OSX 10.12 and WINDOWS 8.1![]()
Crash reported about 2.5 years ago.
Reported again 2 month ago and got reply:Thanks for support Celemony!Hello,
I am sorry to say, but Melodyne editor 2 is discontinued since the release of version 4 early this year.
With best wishes,
Ulf Kaiser
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