• SONAR
  • Merging after remove silence
2015/04/15 19:28:12
funboyuno
I am working with a fellow who is using DP and when we were talking about DP's Strip Silence, SONAR has Remove Silence. DP then uses Merge to put the clips back together sans noise. I told him I use bounce to track to do that, he said these are different processes.
My question is, is there a merge function in SONAR equivalent to DP's or was I right about bounce to track? If there is a merge function what is it called and where is it?
anyone...? Thanks!
2015/04/15 21:05:40
gswitz
Bounce to Clip... (good for in-place combining of multiple clips. I usually use this when the clips are in the same lane. This is useful for applying Clip level FX or re-joining several small clips together in the same track.
 
Bounce to Track... (good for combining any number of tracks together into a new track).

These are two main methods.
 
When comping there is a special method the builds the comp lane into a new lane.
See step eight in this link...
http://blog.cakewalk.com/comping-the-perfect-take/
 
2015/04/15 21:16:46
icontakt
I think you can just uncheck "Split Clips" in the Remove Silence dialog box when applying the effect.
As for bouncing and merging, Studio One has both (IIRC). Merging clips only generates a seemingly single clip, but it still contains the original clips in editing mode (IIRC). Not sure if it's the same in DP.
2015/04/16 03:47:11
Zargg
I think you can use freeze track. You can still export a frozen track, if needed.
2015/04/17 04:21:03
Kalle Rantaaho
How does "Bounce to clips" actually work with audio tracks after "Remove silence"??
Before the edit the silent parts are audio, even though silent, taking the same amount of disc space as any audio.
After removing silence there is lots of gaps between clips. If you now bounce to clips and then save under a new name
copying all audio with the project, what is the true size of the audio files? Is the silent clip area between waveforms
just visual addition, or is there  automatically generated silent audio through the clip.
 
IIRC, originally the idea behind "Remove Silence" was for a great deal  freeing disc space. In a normal Project you could have several CDs worth of silent audio filling the disc and taxing CPU. 15 years ago that was a significant waste of resources.
 
Or am I confused by missing something obvious?
2015/04/27 17:33:17
funboyuno
Thank you for the offerings, much appreciated. I am in the same boat as Kalle in this situation. Also, sorry, I meant bounce to clip initially and then got busy and could not get back to the thread. A bit of a difference there.
2015/04/27 17:52:26
interpolated
The reason for removing whitespace (silience) and using regions & clips is because it makes a file more efficient to work with. Allows you use more resources at one time, has easier editing and generally speaking much less fuss. The fact you have to confirm which is a clip and what is just a shortened audio part allows flexibility when still deciding on final mix decisions.
 
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