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Post by porkyman on Jan 29, 2016 19:48:18 GMT -6
definitely!!! 1 job and it would pay itself off. seems like a no brainer.
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Post by Ward on Jan 29, 2016 20:00:52 GMT -6
One thing you have to give Pro Tools: It has the edge when it comes to editing. In speed, productivity AND sound quality. The cross fades and other tools with the edits allow you to make seamless edits.
Yes. you should get pro tools... and if you wish to specialize in editing, I just might throw some work your way too... because it can certainly get tedious and 'spendy' at times for both me and the client(s).
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Post by NoFilterChuck on Jan 31, 2016 21:30:30 GMT -6
Sounds like a good idea! Ward, i'll definitely make myself available for that.
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Post by rocinante on Jan 31, 2016 23:35:30 GMT -6
So I just moved a 23 track song from cubase to pt. It took all of 10 minutes. When you export stems in I believe any daw it doesn't matter where you punched in because its treating the area before like unrecorded space on the track. You have to be specific when your exporting in some of the daws e.g. studio one, aa, reaper, butnthere is no need for any time alignment. I only have cubase btw so I can do things like this and hardly ever use it. My favorite part of pt is how it handles hardware inserts and the note box. Studio one requires their 'pipeline' plug in for instance to use hardware. I use a console so its never necessary but if I were more itb it would seem indispensable.
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