Editing Guitars in REAPER
Vložit
- čas přidán 7. 08. 2024
- Getting it right at the source is always best practice, but what do you do if your performer isn't able to get it as "right" as you'd like it to be?
In this episode, we'll look at a few different options for editing guitars in REAPER to tighten up a performance.
NOTE: Was having some issues with Resolve while editing and forgot to "deverb" my voiceover on this one.
➡️➡️ Check out my "Drum Editing in REAPER" course on Pro Mix Academy!
bit.ly/3DfFgww
Got a question you'd like to see answered on the channel? Drop a comment below!
We're on Discord! Join us, we have cookies...
/ discord
If you'd like to support the channel, you can help by liking, subscribing, smashing the notification bell, and sharing with others.
You can also support me by buying me a coffee, because I like coffee :)
/ letstalkaboutreaper
www.buymeacoffee.com/talkabou... - Hudba
A detailed Guitar editing course like the drum editing would be great 🤘
You have a great voice over voice!
Thank you!
Very well explained sir 👏
Very nicely done!
There's always something to learn. Thanks for this!
Amazing video! I'm going to have to watch this over and over! SUBSCRIBED.
This was super helpful! Thanks
Great video. Thanks for this 😎🤘
Good cover! Bass tone is killer!
Thank you so much! Very usefull stuff!
Very very good detail video explanation. Not once did I have to fast forward. You're straight to the point. Love it.
Very good video, easy to follow and great informations, i loved it!
Amazing video! Thank you!
Thanks for this. Very helpful.
Amazing! Thanks a lot!
Awesome lesson. Good work! Thanks!
Thank you! Definitely could have been better, I should have paid more attention to the snap offsets, as I've had to go back and manually adjust a little bit 🤣
Great video
Thank you!!
thanks Mike 🎸
This man is a beast. Love from Alberta, Canada.
Great job, Myk. Well presented and you addressed some of the things that you run into when you are actually using the DAW that might not get covered in documentation. I've been using Pro Tools since Eisenhower was president, but do stripped down cinematic guitar rock and Pro Tools is feeling bloated and slow right now. Cheers!
Learned so much thank you!
Hey, thank YOU for watching!
Thanks!
nice! Thank you
Great video with practical examples - this will save me a lot of time - thanks!
Perhaps I should do a follow up and work on something less percussive and without space. Slip editing is great for leads and heavier rhythms
@@LetsTalkAboutReaperYes that would be great 👍 I will stay tuned 😀
Yep, a gold mine here...
sick tysm
nice indeed.
cooolawsome how do you render that with fx added in the final mix
q to quantize media items? I had no idea ... (cries over wasted hours of snapping items to grid)
Cool tricks!
A1
check out MK Slicer from reateam scripts
Question: Which algorithm is the best for the stretch markers you think?
There's not really an exact answer for that, it will depend greatly on the material. I usually leave it at whatever the project default is unless it sounds funny, then try some of the others and see if it improves
@@LetsTalkAboutReaper Ok I do the same. Hey thanks for taking the time to answer brother.
Great stuff as always. Just one thing: I talked a time ago with the studio wher i record my first EP and they said that to edit guitars its better split and crossfade then strech because of glitchs and stupid effects. Do you agree?
Or its a technique to use only for milimeter editing?
Depends on the source material, really. Typically with stretch markers, it's a good idea to add anchor points just outside of the material to be stretched to prevent warping things outside the desired area. In many cases, a combination of split/crossfade slip editing AND stretch markers works great. Other times, one or the other is fine.
For this particular use case, the stretch markers did the trick and made short work of lining up those transients, but again, depending on the source and the desired affect, you may have to change your approach (lead guitar comes to mind). But since this was a section that was simple 16th notes, the dynamic split and stretch option seemed the fastest way and it sounded alright.
Stretching can get quite wonky beyond 90% speed, in my experience, if the section being stretched is a bit long
I can't stand the dynamic split option, it never works for me. It cuts up the audio in all the wrong places, no matter how I toggle the settings. It's a nightmare, I'd much rather just do it manually.