Melodyne Horn Section
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- KVRer
- 3 posts since 11 Jun, 2005 from Peterborough
Evening,
Recently switched computers. I started with Melodyne CR8 and moved up to Studio a while ago. I have a few tracks which used the Melodyne Sound Library - Horn Section. Now fully realising that they switched off the activation service many years ago, I now realise sitting here with my disc and serial number that I'm kind of snookered. My question is, "Was anyone smart enough to print the phrases of this library into audio files that could be imported and used with my Melodyne 5.0?" Thank you for any advice you might have.
Regards,
Dog
Recently switched computers. I started with Melodyne CR8 and moved up to Studio a while ago. I have a few tracks which used the Melodyne Sound Library - Horn Section. Now fully realising that they switched off the activation service many years ago, I now realise sitting here with my disc and serial number that I'm kind of snookered. My question is, "Was anyone smart enough to print the phrases of this library into audio files that could be imported and used with my Melodyne 5.0?" Thank you for any advice you might have.
Regards,
Dog
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- KVRAF
- 2509 posts since 24 Jul, 2017
I would contact the support at Celemony and ask them if they have a solution. They are usually very helpful and fast.
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- KVRAF
- 2140 posts since 16 Jan, 2013 from USA
Never even heard of it. What format are the files?
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- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 3 posts since 11 Jun, 2005 from Peterborough
Morning Jon,
The MSL's were circa 2006 that came out alongside Uberschall's Liquid Instruments. Essentially, they were a series of phrases that you could redo for your own tracks using Melodyne's magic. The file you get was .msl format (Melodyne Sound Library), you popped that into your sample folder, open Melodyne, ctrl+shift+B to import. The first time you did, you needed to activate using the serial number and you were off to the races. The file currency was standard .wav files.
Cheers,
Dwayne
The MSL's were circa 2006 that came out alongside Uberschall's Liquid Instruments. Essentially, they were a series of phrases that you could redo for your own tracks using Melodyne's magic. The file you get was .msl format (Melodyne Sound Library), you popped that into your sample folder, open Melodyne, ctrl+shift+B to import. The first time you did, you needed to activate using the serial number and you were off to the races. The file currency was standard .wav files.
Cheers,
Dwayne