[LAD] [ANN] IR: LV2 Convolution Reverb

Andres Cabrera mantaraya36 at gmail.com
Sun Feb 27 10:41:41 UTC 2011


Hi,

This feature is actually also very useful in post production for film
or TV, where often you get a video edit after you've started doing
your mixing, and you have to move big blocks of tracks in time. I'd
also like to know if there's a simple way to do this in ardour, or to
add my vote for it =)

Cheers,
Andres

2011/2/27 Jörn Nettingsmeier <nettings at folkwang-hochschule.de>:
> On 02/27/2011 01:05 AM, Thomas Vecchione wrote:
>>
>> Fons
>>
>> Being someone that tracks recordings live constantly, I am curious, if
>> the singer only wanted to overdub one section of their vocals with
>> another, and you are not touching the remainder of the recorded tracks,
>> exactly what stops you from doing a standard punch in/out in your example?
>
> in classical recording sessions, overdubs happen rarely if ever.
> i guess the situation here is that multiple full or partial takes were
> recorded with the full ensemble, and the editing happens afterwards, when
> all musicians are gone.
> iiuc, the soloist requested one section to be replaced with another take.
> since there is no "click", this usually means that the part after the new
> spliced-in section will move in time, slightly.
> which is a bit of a problem in ardour while you haven't consolidated region
> fragments (which often you don't want to do until the very end), because you
> have to be very careful to move all subsequent regions.
> easy in the vertical thanks to edit groups, but quite hard in the
> horizontal. or maybe i'm overlooking yet another feature?
>
> best,
>
> jörn
>
>
>
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