![]() ![]() (Be sure to bounce to 16-bit, dither, etc.) After the bounce, in the sequence editor, hide all tracks except the newley bounced track. Instead of bouncing to individual files, bounce the entire sequence as an interleaved SD2 file (split stereo will also work fine) and tell DP to add the bounced file into the sequence. If you had say a full length live CD to master that was all one audio file, how would you get markers/regions from DP into Waveburner (or Toast etc)? Is it a necessity to bounce to a bunch of separate sound files in DP just to create track markers in WB? Seems like there should be a way to simply get markers or regions (soundbites, not separate files) exported from DP to another pgm but I haven't figured it out yet. Philbrown wrote: This thread is timely! I 'master' spoken word seminars on a regular basis, but my workflow is slightly changing now. This thread is timely! I 'master' spoken word seminars on a regular basis, but my workflow is slightly changing now. The most important gear (given a base level of professionalism) a ME has is his ears. Point is, you don't HAVE to use Seqouia- nice though it is. Yes, I do, though I use my resources efficiently so I can keep my prices within reach of indies in need of a pro. ME's ears are always better than mine (and others) from my experience. I've been down that road and true ME's are just as surgical as musicians at their craft. I have worked around the best and most use Sequoia for some reason in which I'm not an ME, so don't care. I prepare my masters in DP using a variety of digital and analog processes (through a Metric Halo 2882 for conversion) and actually burn my master discs with Waveburner. The disc burning in DP is a reference convenience at best, never a fully formed feature IMO. For one thing, you cannot burn Red Book (actually, Orange Book PMCD Masters) from DP. This little workflow hack came in handy for me when I needed to bounce hundreds of lines of dialog into individual files for a video game, and didn't have days or the brain power to do anything of the sort.Ghobish wrote:I master in DP all the time- everyday, in fact- but I NEVER burn discs from there. Mind you, I'm writing a lot of this from memory and away from my Mac, so if this isn't quite what happens, let me know and I'll revise it with correct instructions. So if you wanted these files to remain lossless/be renamed/coverted to another format/etc., just make sure you specify accordingly before completing. Keep in mind though, this program is ultimately a converter, and will split/convert/rename/embed all at once according to your preferences. Once you've selected to include it, you'll see your two regions in a list, and can split them from there as two separate files, each following the exact length of your markers. You should be prompted about the file containing a cue sheet, which you want to include in the conversion/split. Locate your bounced file, and drag it onto the XLD icon. This is important, as this container format will store marker metadata (cue sheet) that XLD will read later. Then position your cycle at the beginning of the first song's marker, all the way to the end of the last song's.īounce your track as AIFF. You may want to drag the markers out slightly longer than your songs to include any reverb tails (if applicable). You can quickly access this in the drop down arrow in your marker track in the arrange window. So, now what you'll want to do in Logic is select each song in your session and create markers for them using the "create markers from region" function. The menus can be a little overwhelming at first, but I've been using the app for years and wouldn't mind letting you know what does what if you're lost. Feel free to message me if you need help here. Click the "Batch" tab and make sure that "Automatically split file with embedded cue sheet" is checked. Once installed, open XLD and go to Preferences (command + comma). You can get it here under the download's section: It's a free, very powerful, audio file type converter app, but will do much more. I use a program called XLD to accomplish this. ![]()
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