Two ways (I think).
The one I (and probably everyone else) use, is select New track, from the
sends popup menu, and then type in a track name. This'll name the bus properly
for you, then you can use it with any track.
Or else, you can create a generic aux track (auxiliary input), and as long
and I do almost
nothing on track incerts in the way of plugins because I don't like the time it
eats up.
Thanks again though.
- Original Message -
From: Chris Norman
To: ptaccess@googlegroups.com
Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2012 2:47 PM
Subject: Re: Creating busses
Two ways (I
10:03 PM
Subject: Re: Creating busses
Thanks Chris, I will give it a shot when I go to the studio tomorrow. I am
still trying to get this work flow down. I work so quick in Sonar that compared
to PT it is like I am working on a comadore 64 in PT. I got to get this bus
stuff figgured out
Hi,
I've done the aux tracks, I'm not sure what to do from here though…
Any help would be great!!
Chris Harrington
On Sep 29, 2011, at 5:28 PM, Monkey Pusher wrote:
Quick answer since i am on my way out and don't have time to do a more
detailed one, but should point u in the right direction.
Hi Christopher,
Check out this link this will help you ketch the PT buss!
http://protoolstraining.com/ProMedia-Blog/Tip-and-Trick/lets-all-get-on-the-bus.html
Chuck Reichel
954-742-0019
www.SoundPictureRecording.com
On Oct 3, 2011, at 10:31 AM, Christopher Harrington wrote:
Hi,
I've done
Hi everyone,
I'm mixing a rock song, and I'm wanting to create a drums bus electric guitar
bus, and what not. Would anyone mind breaking this down for me in PT? I've done
it in sonar, but PT seems much different in that regard.
Thanks,
Chris Harrington