A few months ago I read an article in SOS magazine that talked about using Reason 3 for mastering/and processing audio files much in the same way you would use t-racks. Simply, you can open any aiff/wav file in the NNXT sampler, drop in in on middle C, and draw in the note for the length of the file in the sequencer, then you can run through any of the maximizers, compressors, or other effect units. then export as a new file, doing no damage to the original file.
I've used this to clean up some old demos and crappy live recordings and it works pretty well. If someone's already posted this info forgive me, I'm new here. Just thought I'd throw it out there as a way to acheive t-racks style processing with out spending anymore dough...
Anyone else have other "outside the box" ways of using reason?
Subject: Reason 3 as a mastering/processing tool.Pages: 1 | |
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![]() wade baird | October 22, 2006 4:27:15 PM |
![]() HypnotiQ Sorcere | October 30, 2006 1:48:59 AM I really wouldn't know even how to use it as a mastering tool, i mainly use it as a rewire acompainiment for Logic Pro along with Live 5 , The only thing i do on reason is compression and limiting, when it comes to anything in the mastering realm, But alot of people use Reason alone, so im sure their are some deep dark secrets about reason that many of us don't know |
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