Subject:The Mystery of the Acid Vibrato
Posted by: Jess
Date:4/17/1999 12:05:04 AM
After creating a number of acid tracks, I mixed them to one stereo track. While listening to this I recorded new material into a second track. When this is played it sounds as if it has an overall tremolo/vibrato type of effect applied to it. What might cause this and how can I get rid of it? Using win95/64mb ram and my system, though not the world's fastest, is generally quite good at HD recording. TIA. |
Subject:Re: The Mystery of the Acid Vibrato
Date:4/19/1999 7:30:33 AM
Hey Jess, I don't have an answer for you, but I am experiencing a very similar problem. So, I thought I'd check and see if there are any other similarities in our applications. First of all I'm using an Opcode USB DATport for audio (I don't think this has anything to do with the tremolo effect - but SoundForge 4.0 appears to have a problem recognizing it, therefore I am having some problems with effect plug-ins), in addition, I am using 160 MB RAM with a Pentium class running Win98, so we can most likely rule out a low/limited resource issue. My problem may be in how I'm importing the WAV files to ACID. I recorded the raw file with SoundForge without using a sync mode, therefore, the samples are not locked to the measure for a reference point. I didn't think to much of this issue until I noticed that I was very difficult to get the editor to not 'snap' to a position. Therefore, when I finally added or deleted space to compensate for the misalignment the interpreted length of the sound was off by the same margin. In other words if I inserted 0:0.3 length of silence the overall length of the sample would not reflect the difference (appears to only be divisible by 0:1.0 or greater). As many posts here have already pointed out the number of measures is commonly misinterpreted by ACID once the 'loop' sample is introduced. However, even after using a standard calculation I can never completely remove the tremolo effect (it gets better, but never quite right). I am going to try recording the samples differently to see if that makes a difference, but I'm having some synch issues as well. Good luck, Sean Jess wrote: > After creating a number of acid tracks, I mixed them to one > stereo track. While listening to this I recorded new > material into a second track. When this is played it sounds > as if it has an overall tremolo/vibrato type of effect > applied to it. What might cause this and how can I get rid > of it? > Using win95/64mb ram and my system, though not the world's > fastest, is generally quite good at HD recording. > TIA. |
Subject:Re: The Mystery of the Acid Vibrato
Date:4/20/1999 4:23:26 AM
More than likely it's a by-product of excessive tempo adjustment. If you take a 150 bpm loop and slow it down to 75 bpm or vice-versa, you'll get an effect of that type. |
Subject:The answer to the Mystery of the Acid Vibrato
Reply by: DBP
Date:7/25/1999 9:44:00 PM
SIMPLE:......after hiting record, just make sure to uncheck the box that says "make new track follow project tempo". Go for it dude. Jess King wrote: >>After creating a number of acid tracks, I mixed them to one >>stereo track. While listening to this I recorded new >>material into a second track. When this is played it sounds >>as if it has an overall tremolo/vibrato type of effect >>applied to it. What might cause this and how can I get rid >>of it? >>Using win95/64mb ram and my system, though not the world's >>fastest, is generally quite good at HD recording. >>TIA. >> |
Subject:Re: The Mystery of the Acid Vibrato
Reply by: Slickster
Date:6/5/2000 6:01:00 PM
Jess, why would you even mixall your tracks to a new track, when you have unlimited tracks ?? Do you then discard the originals ?? if not theres your problem. If so, does it only happen AFTER you did the mixdown ?? are you doing this ONLY on Acid ? Have you added FX to any of the track PRIOR to mixing ?? a lot of factors can be causing it backtrack and trace your steps to find exactly where it first starts happening hope this helps slick Jess King wrote: >>After creating a number of acid tracks, I mixed them to one >>stereo track. While listening to this I recorded new >>material into a second track. When this is played it sounds >>as if it has an overall tremolo/vibrato type of effect >>applied to it. What might cause this and how can I get rid >>of it? >>Using win95/64mb ram and my system, though not the world's >>fastest, is generally quite good at HD recording. >>TIA. >> |