OK. Gave it a quick whirl. No luck.Robert Randolph wrote:Ok. I don't think I understand your #2 idea, or we maybe have different expectations.gesslr wrote: My thought is that if you can do #2, you would not need a ghost track.....you could take the signal directly from the filter....?
Yeh. I'm a big fan of BWS's modulation system. I was very glad to see the improvements in W9.
I'll wait till you can try it and post more.
I guess I thought it would be clever if you could drop an envelope modulator directly on to an Aux Send plugin/filter (that is inserted on a track) and tap the audio at that point for use with your target elsewhere. Then you could get around the problem of having access to only post-fader, post-fx audio for your control signal.
So on a track with a drum loop, I put an Aux Send filter as the first filter on the track, then put a delay after that. I dragged an envelope modulator/modifier to the Aux Send filter, then dragged the filter to the volume control of another track. If my idea worked, turning the delay on or off should have no effect on the control signal going to the volume fader as the delay is after the Aux Send filter. Unfortunately turning on the delay changed the periodicity of the other track's volume fader as well as the send level of the Aux Send I dropped the modifier on. So the envelope modifier obviously can't use the Aux Send as a "tap". It listens to the final output of the channel it's dropped on from what I can see.
Well, back to work!
