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(a)folkwang-hochschule.de>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
_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-dev mailing list
Linux-audio-dev(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev