Midi drum track too quiet to hear properly...
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Peter Widdicombe Peter Widdicombe https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=336849
- KVRian
- 1205 posts since 29 Aug, 2014
Yeah, you really should be disabling direct monitoring on the 202 since you can't really control it.
This means Waveform controls what you hear, but you WILL be listening to the mix as it would be played back later; including levels of guitar, drums, and anything else you may have layered. Plus reverb or anything else on your tracks.
Oh, and on input - you should be able to disable the "record as a stereo pair" and have 2 independent MONO inputs, so if you do, you can add a Mike and record it on a separate channel within Waveform. Vocals, or comments and swearing B-) You can select input 1 and input 2 on different tracks...
Or, if someone is over, record 2 guitars onto separate tracks at the same time.
If you're using pedals, a Y-jack might also let you record raw guitar and guitar with pedals as a separate track...
This means Waveform controls what you hear, but you WILL be listening to the mix as it would be played back later; including levels of guitar, drums, and anything else you may have layered. Plus reverb or anything else on your tracks.
Oh, and on input - you should be able to disable the "record as a stereo pair" and have 2 independent MONO inputs, so if you do, you can add a Mike and record it on a separate channel within Waveform. Vocals, or comments and swearing B-) You can select input 1 and input 2 on different tracks...
Or, if someone is over, record 2 guitars onto separate tracks at the same time.
If you're using pedals, a Y-jack might also let you record raw guitar and guitar with pedals as a separate track...
Waveform 13; Win10 desktop/8 Gig; Win11 Laptop; MPK261; VFX+disfunctional ESQ-1
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 345 posts since 7 Mar, 2023
Some good points there, thanks. I usually double-perform all guitar parts, so don't usually split the input, but yes, splitting the signal (clean vs. processed) can be useful sometimes. I did it recently, with an electro-acoustic guitar.. mic going into one input and guitar pickup going to t'other.Peter Widdicombe wrote: Thu Oct 19, 2023 7:48 pm Yeah, you really should be disabling direct monitoring on the 202 since you can't really control it.
This means Waveform controls what you hear, but you WILL be listening to the mix as it would be played back later; including levels of guitar, drums, and anything else you may have layered. Plus reverb or anything else on your tracks.
Oh, and on input - you should be able to disable the "record as a stereo pair" and have 2 independent MONO inputs, so if you do, you can add a Mike and record it on a separate channel within Waveform. Vocals, or comments and swearing B-) You can select input 1 and input 2 on different tracks...
Or, if someone is over, record 2 guitars onto separate tracks at the same time.
If you're using pedals, a Y-jack might also let you record raw guitar and guitar with pedals as a separate track...
Last edited by Ally007 on Thu Nov 30, 2023 11:46 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 345 posts since 7 Mar, 2023
Some good points there, thanks. I usually double-perform all guitar parts, and don't usually split the signal, but I occasionally do it when recording an electro-acoustic guitar... mic going into one input and guitar pickup going to the other.Peter Widdicombe wrote: Thu Oct 19, 2023 7:48 pm Yeah, you really should be disabling direct monitoring on the 202 since you can't really control it.
This means Waveform controls what you hear, but you WILL be listening to the mix as it would be played back later; including levels of guitar, drums, and anything else you may have layered. Plus reverb or anything else on your tracks.
Oh, and on input - you should be able to disable the "record as a stereo pair" and have 2 independent MONO inputs, so if you do, you can add a Mike and record it on a separate channel within Waveform. Vocals, or comments and swearing B-) You can select input 1 and input 2 on different tracks...
Or, if someone is over, record 2 guitars onto separate tracks at the same time.
If you're using pedals, a Y-jack might also let you record raw guitar and guitar with pedals as a separate track...
