Very well done and well spoken. Just getting started with this type of thing so this is quite helpful.
Thanks!
WOW that's a cool function. I'll have to try that out with a drum mix when I've got a bit of time to mess around with it.🤘🤘🤘
Yeah - I find it really is a better option than a noise gate as you have far more control. Let me know about your progress!
Very very hot and helpful tip ... I didn't know about this ... thanks a lot ... makes life a lot easier ☺
Thanks George gonna use this tip and the fade tool . question: would leaving the bleeds in effect the quality of the mix or is the tip with fade a standard audio edit?
This was more for illustrative purposes - the fact is, this is a live full band recording, so leaving the bleeds in won't necessarily affect the mix too much - however, if there was any phasing between the mics since the session was in a tight space with the propensity to introduce mic phasing, this would take care of that. Furthermore, in isolating those kicks, you can actually make a midi file from the audio and replace the kicks with better sounding kicks. So, really it is up to you for what your purposes are - I use strip silence for nearly every audio file I record, mostly to keep it very clean. Hope this info is helpful. Thanks for reaching out!!
Very helpful , keeping the file clean is a pro move. Great idea with audio conversion to midi Thanx George all the best.
awesome for a lot of different tasks
Yeah - I use it all the time. Really streamlines the process.