ZebraHZ distortion in Cubase with tempo variations
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- KVRer
- 10 posts since 23 Jul, 2008
Hi
I use Analog Schamanalog in a piece where I have a ritardando, tempo goes from 77 to 66 and then back again to 77. I have severe distortion and suspect that it has to do with Cubase and tempovariation and certain VI's (kontakt!!) doesn't work so well. I can't find the parameter that turns off the MIDI sync from Cubase.
Any ideas what to do?
Regards
Musicmind
I use Analog Schamanalog in a piece where I have a ritardando, tempo goes from 77 to 66 and then back again to 77. I have severe distortion and suspect that it has to do with Cubase and tempovariation and certain VI's (kontakt!!) doesn't work so well. I can't find the parameter that turns off the MIDI sync from Cubase.
Any ideas what to do?
Regards
Musicmind
- KVRAF
- 14455 posts since 16 Feb, 2005 from Planet Earth, Somewhere
Some plugins do, some don't.
I usually turn off the internal fx of those that do, and 97/100 times that help. (Not so much with some kontakt libraries alas).
rsp
I usually turn off the internal fx of those that do, and 97/100 times that help. (Not so much with some kontakt libraries alas).
rsp
sound sculptist
- KVRAF
- 14455 posts since 16 Feb, 2005 from Planet Earth, Somewhere
I am of course speaking about the internal effects of the plugin (not cubase).
I dont' have Analog Schmananlog so can't tell you about that specifically, but if you click the wrench tool in Kontakt you can usually find the FX in there.
rsp
I dont' have Analog Schmananlog so can't tell you about that specifically, but if you click the wrench tool in Kontakt you can usually find the FX in there.
rsp
sound sculptist
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- KVRian
- 814 posts since 18 May, 2007 from Berlin
In the GLOB/FX tab you have the FX Grid in the middle, double click on an effect (yellow rectangle) to deactivate it.
Check if these noises come from the delay. It uses tempo-synched settings, so a change in tempo may cause small pitch shifts.
In the delay you could change the tempo-synched values to absolute values (the "1 sec" setting) and then change the ratios to give them different speeds so that the delays happen at different times (like they do with the tempo-synched values).
Viktor
Check if these noises come from the delay. It uses tempo-synched settings, so a change in tempo may cause small pitch shifts.
In the delay you could change the tempo-synched values to absolute values (the "1 sec" setting) and then change the ratios to give them different speeds so that the delays happen at different times (like they do with the tempo-synched values).
Viktor
