Condense Take Lanes

Author
pannacotta army
Max Output Level: -90 dBFS
  • Total Posts : 43
  • Joined: 2014/07/31 13:04:59
  • Status: offline
2014/11/01 11:19:48 (permalink)

Condense Take Lanes

In the process of recording a vocal with numerous takes, I now have about 25 "take lanes".
Most of the clips don't have any timing overlap, so is there a quick way to compact these down into a fewer number of lanes?
#1

3 Replies Related Threads

    Anderton
    Max Output Level: 0 dBFS
    • Total Posts : 14070
    • Joined: 2003/11/06 14:02:03
    • Status: offline
    Re: Condense Take Lanes 2014/11/01 11:47:30 (permalink)
    If you're left with only clips you want to keep and the rest are muted, select all the clips and bounce them.

    The first 3 books in "The Musician's Guide to Home Recording" series are available from Hal Leonard and http://www.reverb.com. Listen to my music on http://www.YouTube.com/thecraiganderton, and visit http://www.craiganderton.com. Thanks!
    #2
    pannacotta army
    Max Output Level: -90 dBFS
    • Total Posts : 43
    • Joined: 2014/07/31 13:04:59
    • Status: offline
    Re: Condense Take Lanes 2014/11/02 06:30:16 (permalink)
    Anderton
    If you're left with only clips you want to keep and the rest are muted, select all the clips and bounce them.




    Thanks, but presumably that will leave me with one large clip and I wanted (for the moment at least) to retain the individual clips 
    #3
    rebel007
    Max Output Level: -72 dBFS
    • Total Posts : 926
    • Joined: 2013/07/17 11:24:29
    • Location: Victoria, Australia
    • Status: offline
    Re: Condense Take Lanes 2014/11/02 07:13:02 (permalink)
    I assume when you say 'most clips' you mean you have a mixture of clips that overlap and most that don't. You could drag and drop those that don't overlap, and you want to keep, into one or three take lanes then delete the empty lanes that you then have left. I'm not sure there is a quicker method than this when you have such a mixture, but it should only take you a minute at most.
     
    Otherwise, Craig's suggestion is a quick way of bouncing selected clips to new lanes. You still have the opportunity to drag over and select parts of that new clip, and Sonar will automatically slice it up at those selections.

    Home Built Desktop Computer: Intel Core i5 750: 4Mb RAM: NVidia 210 Silent: Windows 10 32bit: Sonar Platinum: Roland OctaCapture
    Presario CQ41 Laptop: Intel Core i5 760: 4Mb RAM: Windows 10 32bit: Sonar Platinum (Retired)
    CbB on HP Pavilion Laptop 64bit: GeForce Video Card: Intel 8550: 256GB SSD 1TB Data Drive: Windows10 64bit
    #4
    Jump to:
    © 2025 APG vNext Commercial Version 5.1