Re: Automating the send mute button.

2015-02-11 Thread chad morrison
Items to use that technique when I was using sonar. I was able to achieve my 
automation by writing a static pass beginning of the project and then selecting 
the area I wanted the button to be turned on and automating it that way.  
Thanks again for all the help.

From Chad's iPhone

 On Feb 11, 2015, at 7:59 AM, Slau Halatyn slauhala...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Chad,
 
 Another way you can achieve this effect without getting into automation is to 
 duplicate your vocal track and only have that track contain the words you 
 wish to send to the delay. You can cut those from the original track and copy 
 them into the second track. This technique seems more involved but if you 
 want to avoid the whole automation thing, you can certainly take this 
 approach as an alternative.
 
 Slau
 
 On Feb 11, 2015, at 2:25 AM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 Thanks guys! That helps a lot. I'm not currently using a control surface so, 
 thank you for the alternative directions.
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 10:23 PM, Mike Lockett mloc...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Chad if you are working with out a control surface,
 assuming your  vocal track is sending to the aux with your delay,
 put your aux track in automation and select it.
 now when the transport is engaged press “shift-M” to toggle the mute on and 
 off…
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 9:53 PM, Slau Halatyn slauhala...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi Chad,
 
 I'm assuming you have an aux input with the delay plug-in instantiated and 
 that a send is routed to a bus which is being received by the aux input.
 
 In the automation window, enable Send Mute automation. With a control 
 surface, the following procedure is simple. You mute the send, set the 
 track's automation to Write and engage the transport. Without a surface, 
 you'll need to go to the Track's output window to the sends section and 
 mute the send and then enable Write mode and engage the transport.
 
 Wherever you want the track to send to the delay, you'll need to click the 
 Mute button to toggle its state. Again, with a control surface, it's quite 
 easy and intuitive. If your unmuted sections are particularly short and 
 you find it tough to perform the button presses in quick succession, you 
 can use a slightly different method for the mute automation. Start with 
 muting and engaging the transport in write mode. Select the word or words 
 you wish to unmute to the delay, make sure you're still in Write mode, 
 unmute the send and engage the transport. The track will only play for the 
 duration of the selected word or words. Automation will be written for 
 that section as unmuted and will revert to the muted state after the 
 selection. You can repeat this process for each word or section.
 
 By default, automation is set to change to Auto Touch after an automation 
 pass so you'll have to switch back to Auto Write each time you select the 
 word or words. Be aware, however, that when you engage the transport, 
 you'll be writing the current mute state so you need to make sure 
 everything is correct before engaging the transport. With a surface, it's 
 fairly easy to just keep the automation in Auto Touch mode and use the 
 send mute button to unmute and mute on the fly for each section that 
 requires the automation.
 
 Hope that helps,
 
 Slau
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 7:00 PM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 Hello guys,
 Sorry about all the questions lately. However, I do have one more. Could 
 someone please explain the procedure for muting  the send button. I'm 
 trying to have a delay on only certain words during the vocal track.
 Thank you very much for your time, Chad
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
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Re: Automating the send mute button.

2015-02-11 Thread Steve Sparrow

 On 12 Feb 2015, at 12:43 am, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 Items to use that technique when I was using sonar. I was able to achieve my 
 automation by writing a static pass beginning of the project and then 
 selecting the area I wanted the button to be turned on and automating it that 
 way.  Thanks again for all the help.
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 On Feb 11, 2015, at 7:59 AM, Slau Halatyn slauhala...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Chad,
 
 Another way you can achieve this effect without getting into automation is 
 to duplicate your vocal track and only have that track contain the words you 
 wish to send to the delay. You can cut those from the original track and 
 copy them into the second track. This technique seems more involved but if 
 you want to avoid the whole automation thing, you can certainly take this 
 approach as an alternative.
 
 Slau
 
 On Feb 11, 2015, at 2:25 AM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 Thanks guys! That helps a lot. I'm not currently using a control surface 
 so, thank you for the alternative directions.
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 10:23 PM, Mike Lockett mloc...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Chad if you are working with out a control surface,
 assuming your  vocal track is sending to the aux with your delay,
 put your aux track in automation and select it.
 now when the transport is engaged press “shift-M” to toggle the mute on 
 and off…
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 9:53 PM, Slau Halatyn slauhala...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi Chad,
 
 I'm assuming you have an aux input with the delay plug-in instantiated 
 and that a send is routed to a bus which is being received by the aux 
 input.
 
 In the automation window, enable Send Mute automation. With a control 
 surface, the following procedure is simple. You mute the send, set the 
 track's automation to Write and engage the transport. Without a surface, 
 you'll need to go to the Track's output window to the sends section and 
 mute the send and then enable Write mode and engage the transport.
 
 Wherever you want the track to send to the delay, you'll need to click 
 the Mute button to toggle its state. Again, with a control surface, it's 
 quite easy and intuitive. If your unmuted sections are particularly short 
 and you find it tough to perform the button presses in quick succession, 
 you can use a slightly different method for the mute automation. Start 
 with muting and engaging the transport in write mode. Select the word or 
 words you wish to unmute to the delay, make sure you're still in Write 
 mode, unmute the send and engage the transport. The track will only play 
 for the duration of the selected word or words. Automation will be 
 written for that section as unmuted and will revert to the muted state 
 after the selection. You can repeat this process for each word or section.
 
 By default, automation is set to change to Auto Touch after an automation 
 pass so you'll have to switch back to Auto Write each time you select the 
 word or words. Be aware, however, that when you engage the transport, 
 you'll be writing the current mute state so you need to make sure 
 everything is correct before engaging the transport. With a surface, it's 
 fairly easy to just keep the automation in Auto Touch mode and use the 
 send mute button to unmute and mute on the fly for each section that 
 requires the automation.
 
 Hope that helps,
 
 Slau
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 7:00 PM, chad morrison 
 chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Hello guys,
 Sorry about all the questions lately. However, I do have one more. Could 
 someone please explain the procedure for muting  the send button. I'm 
 trying to have a delay on only certain words during the vocal track.
 Thank you very much for your time, Chad
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
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 Groups Pro Tools Accessibility group.
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Re: Automating the send mute button.

2015-02-11 Thread Slau Halatyn
Chad,

Another way you can achieve this effect without getting into automation is to 
duplicate your vocal track and only have that track contain the words you wish 
to send to the delay. You can cut those from the original track and copy them 
into the second track. This technique seems more involved but if you want to 
avoid the whole automation thing, you can certainly take this approach as an 
alternative.

Slau

On Feb 11, 2015, at 2:25 AM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com wrote:

 Thanks guys! That helps a lot. I'm not currently using a control surface so, 
 thank you for the alternative directions.
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 10:23 PM, Mike Lockett mloc...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Chad if you are working with out a control surface,
 assuming your  vocal track is sending to the aux with your delay,
 put your aux track in automation and select it.
 now when the transport is engaged press “shift-M” to toggle the mute on and 
 off…
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 9:53 PM, Slau Halatyn slauhala...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi Chad,
 
 I'm assuming you have an aux input with the delay plug-in instantiated and 
 that a send is routed to a bus which is being received by the aux input.
 
 In the automation window, enable Send Mute automation. With a control 
 surface, the following procedure is simple. You mute the send, set the 
 track's automation to Write and engage the transport. Without a surface, 
 you'll need to go to the Track's output window to the sends section and 
 mute the send and then enable Write mode and engage the transport.
 
 Wherever you want the track to send to the delay, you'll need to click the 
 Mute button to toggle its state. Again, with a control surface, it's quite 
 easy and intuitive. If your unmuted sections are particularly short and you 
 find it tough to perform the button presses in quick succession, you can 
 use a slightly different method for the mute automation. Start with muting 
 and engaging the transport in write mode. Select the word or words you wish 
 to unmute to the delay, make sure you're still in Write mode, unmute the 
 send and engage the transport. The track will only play for the duration of 
 the selected word or words. Automation will be written for that section as 
 unmuted and will revert to the muted state after the selection. You can 
 repeat this process for each word or section.
 
 By default, automation is set to change to Auto Touch after an automation 
 pass so you'll have to switch back to Auto Write each time you select the 
 word or words. Be aware, however, that when you engage the transport, 
 you'll be writing the current mute state so you need to make sure 
 everything is correct before engaging the transport. With a surface, it's 
 fairly easy to just keep the automation in Auto Touch mode and use the send 
 mute button to unmute and mute on the fly for each section that requires 
 the automation.
 
 Hope that helps,
 
 Slau
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 7:00 PM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 Hello guys,
 Sorry about all the questions lately. However, I do have one more. Could 
 someone please explain the procedure for muting  the send button. I'm 
 trying to have a delay on only certain words during the vocal track.
 Thank you very much for your time, Chad
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 -- 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
 Pro Tools Accessibility group.
 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
 email to ptaccess+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
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Re: Automating the send mute button.

2015-02-10 Thread Mike Lockett
Chad if you are working with out a control surface,
assuming your  vocal track is sending to the aux with your delay,
put your aux track in automation and select it.
now when the transport is engaged press “shift-M” to toggle the mute on and off…

On Feb 10, 2015, at 9:53 PM, Slau Halatyn slauhala...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Chad,
 
 I'm assuming you have an aux input with the delay plug-in instantiated and 
 that a send is routed to a bus which is being received by the aux input.
 
 In the automation window, enable Send Mute automation. With a control 
 surface, the following procedure is simple. You mute the send, set the 
 track's automation to Write and engage the transport. Without a surface, 
 you'll need to go to the Track's output window to the sends section and mute 
 the send and then enable Write mode and engage the transport.
 
 Wherever you want the track to send to the delay, you'll need to click the 
 Mute button to toggle its state. Again, with a control surface, it's quite 
 easy and intuitive. If your unmuted sections are particularly short and you 
 find it tough to perform the button presses in quick succession, you can use 
 a slightly different method for the mute automation. Start with muting and 
 engaging the transport in write mode. Select the word or words you wish to 
 unmute to the delay, make sure you're still in Write mode, unmute the send 
 and engage the transport. The track will only play for the duration of the 
 selected word or words. Automation will be written for that section as 
 unmuted and will revert to the muted state after the selection. You can 
 repeat this process for each word or section.
 
 By default, automation is set to change to Auto Touch after an automation 
 pass so you'll have to switch back to Auto Write each time you select the 
 word or words. Be aware, however, that when you engage the transport, you'll 
 be writing the current mute state so you need to make sure everything is 
 correct before engaging the transport. With a surface, it's fairly easy to 
 just keep the automation in Auto Touch mode and use the send mute button to 
 unmute and mute on the fly for each section that requires the automation.
 
 Hope that helps,
 
 Slau
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 7:00 PM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 Hello guys,
 Sorry about all the questions lately. However, I do have one more. Could 
 someone please explain the procedure for muting  the send button. I'm trying 
 to have a delay on only certain words during the vocal track.
 Thank you very much for your time, Chad
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 -- 
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 Pro Tools Accessibility group.
 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
 email to ptaccess+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
 For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
 
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Re: Automating the send mute button.

2015-02-10 Thread Mike Lockett
Chad what I do is,
create an Aux track.
I then send the vocal to that track.
Put the effect on the Aux track and use the automation on it.
I’m sure there are other methods but this works for me…

On Feb 10, 2015, at 6:00 PM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hello guys,
 Sorry about all the questions lately. However, I do have one more. Could 
 someone please explain the procedure for muting  the send button. I'm trying 
 to have a delay on only certain words during the vocal track.
 Thank you very much for your time, Chad
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 -- 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
 Pro Tools Accessibility group.
 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
 email to ptaccess+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
 For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

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Re: Automating the send mute button.

2015-02-10 Thread Slau Halatyn
Hi Chad,

I'm assuming you have an aux input with the delay plug-in instantiated and that 
a send is routed to a bus which is being received by the aux input.

In the automation window, enable Send Mute automation. With a control surface, 
the following procedure is simple. You mute the send, set the track's 
automation to Write and engage the transport. Without a surface, you'll need to 
go to the Track's output window to the sends section and mute the send and then 
enable Write mode and engage the transport.

Wherever you want the track to send to the delay, you'll need to click the Mute 
button to toggle its state. Again, with a control surface, it's quite easy and 
intuitive. If your unmuted sections are particularly short and you find it 
tough to perform the button presses in quick succession, you can use a slightly 
different method for the mute automation. Start with muting and engaging the 
transport in write mode. Select the word or words you wish to unmute to the 
delay, make sure you're still in Write mode, unmute the send and engage the 
transport. The track will only play for the duration of the selected word or 
words. Automation will be written for that section as unmuted and will revert 
to the muted state after the selection. You can repeat this process for each 
word or section.

By default, automation is set to change to Auto Touch after an automation pass 
so you'll have to switch back to Auto Write each time you select the word or 
words. Be aware, however, that when you engage the transport, you'll be writing 
the current mute state so you need to make sure everything is correct before 
engaging the transport. With a surface, it's fairly easy to just keep the 
automation in Auto Touch mode and use the send mute button to unmute and mute 
on the fly for each section that requires the automation.

Hope that helps,

Slau

On Feb 10, 2015, at 7:00 PM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hello guys,
 Sorry about all the questions lately. However, I do have one more. Could 
 someone please explain the procedure for muting  the send button. I'm trying 
 to have a delay on only certain words during the vocal track.
 Thank you very much for your time, Chad
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 -- 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
 Pro Tools Accessibility group.
 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
 email to ptaccess+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
 For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

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Re: Automating the send mute button.

2015-02-10 Thread chad morrison
Thanks guys! That helps a lot. I'm not currently using a control surface so, 
thank you for the alternative directions.

From Chad's iPhone

 On Feb 10, 2015, at 10:23 PM, Mike Lockett mloc...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Chad if you are working with out a control surface,
 assuming your  vocal track is sending to the aux with your delay,
 put your aux track in automation and select it.
 now when the transport is engaged press “shift-M” to toggle the mute on and 
 off…
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 9:53 PM, Slau Halatyn slauhala...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Hi Chad,
 
 I'm assuming you have an aux input with the delay plug-in instantiated and 
 that a send is routed to a bus which is being received by the aux input.
 
 In the automation window, enable Send Mute automation. With a control 
 surface, the following procedure is simple. You mute the send, set the 
 track's automation to Write and engage the transport. Without a surface, 
 you'll need to go to the Track's output window to the sends section and mute 
 the send and then enable Write mode and engage the transport.
 
 Wherever you want the track to send to the delay, you'll need to click the 
 Mute button to toggle its state. Again, with a control surface, it's quite 
 easy and intuitive. If your unmuted sections are particularly short and you 
 find it tough to perform the button presses in quick succession, you can use 
 a slightly different method for the mute automation. Start with muting and 
 engaging the transport in write mode. Select the word or words you wish to 
 unmute to the delay, make sure you're still in Write mode, unmute the send 
 and engage the transport. The track will only play for the duration of the 
 selected word or words. Automation will be written for that section as 
 unmuted and will revert to the muted state after the selection. You can 
 repeat this process for each word or section.
 
 By default, automation is set to change to Auto Touch after an automation 
 pass so you'll have to switch back to Auto Write each time you select the 
 word or words. Be aware, however, that when you engage the transport, you'll 
 be writing the current mute state so you need to make sure everything is 
 correct before engaging the transport. With a surface, it's fairly easy to 
 just keep the automation in Auto Touch mode and use the send mute button to 
 unmute and mute on the fly for each section that requires the automation.
 
 Hope that helps,
 
 Slau
 
 On Feb 10, 2015, at 7:00 PM, chad morrison chadmorrisonmob...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 Hello guys,
 Sorry about all the questions lately. However, I do have one more. Could 
 someone please explain the procedure for muting  the send button. I'm 
 trying to have a delay on only certain words during the vocal track.
 Thank you very much for your time, Chad
 
 From Chad's iPhone
 
 -- 
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 Pro Tools Accessibility group.
 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
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Automating the send mute button.

2015-02-10 Thread chad morrison
Hello guys,
Sorry about all the questions lately. However, I do have one more. Could 
someone please explain the procedure for muting  the send button. I'm trying to 
have a delay on only certain words during the vocal track.
Thank you very much for your time, Chad

From Chad's iPhone

-- 
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Tools Accessibility group.
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