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Use it for live looping, sequencing, arranging, mixing, and much more. Whether you're a live performer, a producer, or just experimenting with sound, Loopy Pro helps you take control of your creative process.

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Auria Pro concurrent Audio and midi recording

Auria Pro experts will know this stuff already, but for fellow dabblers/ midiots this is a really useful bit of knowledge. Following this technique gets you the best of both worlds.

https://youtu.be/_vQKnU3pYv8

Comments

  • Thanks for posting this video. I found it very good as I’m a novice and starting to learn Auria Pro

  • @Arpseechord said:
    Thanks for posting this video. I found it very good as I’m a novice and starting to learn Auria Pro

    >

    You are very welcome.

  • edited December 2017

    That is a good (and SO CLEAR) explanation. Thanks. My n00b question would be 'why bounce the midi down'? The obvious answer being (with no AU instruments) able to have several versions of the same thing playing. Are there other good reasons?

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    That is a good (and SO CLEAR) explanation.

    >

    Yes, it’s very well explained. Works, too. :)

  • @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    That is a good (and SO CLEAR) explanation. Thanks. My n00b question would be 'why bounce the midi down'? The obvious answer being (with no AU instruments) able to have several versions of the same thing playing. Are there other good reasons?

    The best reason is that if you are happy with the sounds you have, and bounce them all the audio, you can then reset your buffer size to much larger, and have more options as to applying plugins in the mix.

  • @rickwaugh said:

    @JohnnyGoodyear said:
    That is a good (and SO CLEAR) explanation. Thanks. My n00b question would be 'why bounce the midi down'? The obvious answer being (with no AU instruments) able to have several versions of the same thing playing. Are there other good reasons?

    The best reason is that if you are happy with the sounds you have, and bounce them all the audio, you can then reset your buffer size to much larger, and have more options as to applying plugins in the mix.

    Thanks Mister Rick. Makes sense...

  • wimwim
    edited December 2017

    Now that’s a really well done video. No fumbling around, a clear idea of what he’s presenting and a logical flow. Looks like it was done in one take too. Impressive.

    (Edit ... removed thread-hijack)

  • @wim said:
    Now that’s a really well done video. No fumbling around, a clear idea of what he’s presenting and a logical flow. Looks like it was done in one take too. Impressive.


    (The rest of this post is OT. Feel free to ignore!)

    I don’t get the whole video thing though. That took 10 minutes to watch what I could have read in a step by step instruction in 30 seconds, filed away for future reference, and easily have relocated via text search. When I came back to the note I could see at a glance that one bit I was missing rather than wade through 10 minutes of video again.

    I know I’m the odd man out these days. It just puzzles me.

    (Carry on ... ignore that guy in the peanut gallery)

    Learning/visualizing styles is all.

    Show me a man gutting a fish and I will gut fish all my life etc etc

  • edited December 2017

    @wim said:
    Now that’s a really well done video. No fumbling around, a clear idea of what he’s presenting and a logical flow. Looks like it was done in one take too. Impressive.


    (The rest of this post is OT. Feel free to ignore!)

    I don’t get the whole video thing though. That took 10 minutes to watch what I could have read in a step by step instruction in 30 seconds, filed away for future reference, and easily have relocated via text search. When I came back to the note I could see at a glance that one bit I was missing rather than wade through 10 minutes of video again.

    I know I’m the odd man out these days. It just puzzles me.

    (Carry on ... ignore that guy in the peanut gallery)

    I agree. Wish more videos got to the point without all the fumbling and glossing over or completely ignoring features the person making the video doesn’t understand. I find the PantsofDeath videos do mostly nail it like this one does.

    Regarding your second part, some (like myself) have difficulty learning from text instruction. I’m horrible with an actual manual. Pretty much have to learn by watching or trial and error on my own. Hell, maybe it’s some kind of learning disability? No idea, but I get your point about it being a hassle to have to try to go back and find that one bit within the video you missed or need a fresh reference to. I try to use a combination of both video instruction, actually doing, and text for detail reference. It’d be cool if these videos were automatically transcribed by YouTube with a reference in time where a word was used within the transcription.

  • wimwim
    edited December 2017

    Great thoughts guys. On second thought hijacking this thread was ill advised. I realized too late to delete. Maybe I’ll start up a separate OT thread some time. It could be a useful discussion for consumers and producers alike. Just too OT for this thread.

  • I remember this video. Clear and useful.

    Ideally, I like to watch videos to get a good visual idea of the app and how it's used, then read the manual, and then use the manual for reference when needed.

    I know getting a good tight video takes a lot of work, planning and editing. Free videos tend to be just a turn-on-the-camera-mess-around kind of thing, but I've learned a lot watching them, so no complaints. If I was making a video, free or not, I'm too anal not to plan it all out, provide background info for beginners, repeat important points for emphasis, and edit extensively for pace. Finding a balance between quick pace and handholding is tough. I appreciate when a teacher has a passion for teaching, and isn't more about showing off or hearing themselves talk.

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