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Furthermore, the audio editor probably provides functions that simply cannot be achieved in live. In an audio editor, you can do this stuff very quickly, just working on the actual waveform, then save it, Live updates the file, and there ya go.
ADOBE AUDITION WON'T PLAY SERIES
In live you'd have to use the arrangement and a very elaborate (read: time consuming and lame) series of adding plugins, freezing, flattening, adding more stuff, feezing and flattening again, as well as cutting / pasting and consolidating to eventually get the new audio loop that has all these changes. Live has a few little functions, like "reverse." But if you wanted to take a loop, reverse only a few sections of it, silence another section of it, apply distortion to just a few beats here and there, a weird delay at the end, etc etc, then save the loop with all this as rendered Audio. Live has no built-in audio editor, so there's all kinds of audio-editing functionality that, if you want to do it, needs to be done elsewhere.
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Is this to address some shortcoming within the DAW? There should be work around.īeats me wrote:I still don’t know what a third party audio editor is for. Now i tried use edit with soundforge but undo history is lost when i close the editor. Otherwise it doesnt make sense for me to use "edit". At least i'd like to have undo history from other program. Now I know that ableton doesn't have undo history(definitely should consider adding this amazing feature). When he saves shit up and when he opens the projects next day he has undo history from sound forge on audio and undo history on arrangement(logic). He can open editor, apply all fx's he wants, render it and logic play it straigh. The edits aren't even occurring inside Live, so it has no way to Undo them But no, you won't have Undo available, but you could at least keep hitting Command-J for Consolidate on copies of the clips, to keep separate versions of each change. As a workflow, it's actually all very smooth working between the two programs, once you've got the basic behavior down. That all sounds more confusing than it really is. If I hadn't done the consolidate command, I would have been modifying the original audio file. Then I hit edit, make whatever changes in audition, and when I hit 'save' I know that the change are being applied to that newly consolidated file in Live. if I want to make edits to an clip, I first create a new copy of the clip, then consolidate that copy this ensures that the new clip references a new audio file, that will be stored in the "consolidated" folder that Live creates in the project. That said, I create a 'backup' system by regularly using Live's "consolidate" function. And if you save the changes in Audition, you are destructively editing the file, so what's done is done. The edits aren't even occurring inside Live, so it has no way to Undo them. Can you undo audio edit's you have made with adobe audition? Im interested in having undo chain all the time for the audio.
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Prprprpr wrote:After you apply audio effects with your editor trough ableton and then shut down your computer and then open it up.