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Viewing 7 replies - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)
  • resonator12
    Participant

    Hey,

    Often, if you want to keep the sound you have going in your DAW, you can just create a new set of audio tracks and then print the drum tracks (either as a kit sound, or with the individual drums routed to individual tracks) so that the plugins you have are kept when you send the files.

    Alternatively, of course you can also print to audio files w/o your plugins enabled.  Once either of these approaches is finished to take your midi kit —> audio / wav format in audio files, you just generate stems for the other studio to accept.  That’s what I’d suggest anyway.


    Reply To: Sending to mixing engineer. What bounce settings are you using? version: 3.1.7
    Operating system: macOS Mojave (10.14)

    1

    Thanked by: Jbone_1
    resonator12
    Participant

    If you want to specifically copy drum hits (e.g., snare, kick, ride, etc.) — then double click on a block of drums (that show up in Track1 for example) and at the top/middle of the screen, click on GRID EDITOR.

     

    Once you’re in Grid Editor, you can use the selector tool (looks like an arrow) to select one or more drum hits, then right click and copy.  Next, just place the playhead in the grid editor where you want to paste and right click, choose paste.  Perhaps oddly, it doens’t seem to work if you use command+V — so you have to right click and then choose paste.

     

    Hope this helps.

     

    Here is how to do this – more visually:

    1) double click on a block of drum content in Track1; 2) select Grid Editor; 3) copy and paste as you wish


    Reply To: How to copy/paste midi notes from one instrument to another version: 3.1.4
    Operating system: macOS Mojave (10.14)

    2

    Thanked by: darkben and onewayout_1
    resonator12
    Participant

    Thanks fellows.  Good to follow this discussion — I’m using ProTools (but have Logic also).  If there are no clear answers I might go back to PT or Logic and play around to see what else might be possible.  Would have to think there is a way to bring a MIDI drum track into SD3.


    Operating system: macOS Mojave (10.14)
    resonator12
    Participant

    Hey all, that’s actually a question I’ve had for a while now.  A few years back I made a drum track w/ another program but deleted the program and kept only the MIDI file.  The other day, I thought to work w/ that MIDI file in SD3 . . . but couldn’t figure out how exactly to get SD3 to work w/ the MIDI file from my DAW.  I haven’t actually found a way to do this.  Will also follow this thread to see if anyone has figured out a way to do this — or if there is something obvious that maybe I just never noticed about SD3.

    resonator12
    Participant

    Same problem — every time.

    resonator12
    Participant

    Hey, are you hitting command + Z (to undo on a mac; or the windows equivalent) — or — are you looking for edit –> undo in the grid editor box?  The grid editor is where you want to work if you are trying to undo something specifically in the grid editor (which actually has its own file, edit, etc. options).

    resonator12
    Participant

    Hello again all,

    <em>I figured it out</em> — in case anyone is coming along and wondering the same thing.

    The solution is to go into Toontrack Product Manager and to use Product Manager to install the software rather than just opening the file that you’ve downloaded and using the installer you find in the folder.  After I used Product Manager to perform the installation, the SD3 library showed up right away.

    Hope this helps anyone wondering the same thing.

    Best regards,

    Joe

Viewing 7 replies - 1 through 7 (of 7 total)

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