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John Patrick
Participant
Topics Started: 6
Replies Created: 13
Has Thanked: 0
Been Thanked: 2
I figured this out. In Acid Pro 11 go EDIT > MIDI Processes and Filters. From there you can select the drum track, start velocity, end velocity, and length of time.
1
Thanked by: Scott EshlemanVegas is what I use. I only use Acid when I need drums. It’s more than adequate for my needs.
I solved this (at least in a way that works for me). I open the stand alone version of SD3 and lay out my drum track. Then I apply the velocity fade as suggested above. When I’m satisfied with the result I drag the faded track from the stand-alone SD3 into Acid Pro 11. The velocity fade-in works great. The only caveat is that I have to go back to the SD3 stand-alone if I need to make any changes to the velocity fade-in. I was hoping I could do all this from right within Acid Pro 11, but apparently it’s not sophisticated enough.
Thanks for everyone’s help.
jp
That’s what I was thinking. Just fading the volume in isn’t going to cut it. The intensity has to increase, just like a real drummer.
I would have thought that everyone would want to do something like this at some point.
1
Thanked by: drumjack52I uninstalled and reinstalled Superior Drummer 3 and Acid Pro 11.
Issue solved.
Thanks.
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