MOTUNATION (formerly UnicorNation) is an independent community for discussing Digital Performer and other MOTU audio software and hardware. It is not affiliated with MOTU.
Forum rules
This forum is for seeking solutions to technical problems involving Digital Performer and/or plug-ins on MacOS, as well as feature requests, criticisms, comparison to other DAWs.
I have and audio track that at one point I'd like to slow it down as if a record belt broke and the record spins to a stop. Basically, shifting the pitch all the way to stop. In DP, I just don't understand how I would do this, and make it sound okay. Any suggestions?
while I have never gone to a complete stop (since it never crossed my mind yet), I have come close by taking the track in question and opening it in a new file and setting a tempo change in the conductor track to reflect the desired results. I use this quite often and then bounce the track, export and drop back into the original file.....
I don't claim to use the most effective and "highbrow" tecniques that dp can offer, but i get things done in my own rain man kind of way.
Macbook pro, 3 gigs of ram, osx 10.62, Dp 5.13, Live 8.1.2, Reason 4, Tc powercore Virus, Albino 3.02, proper ergonomic sitting posture, plenty of coffee (french press only with a pinch of cardamon added)
My dp inspired music..... http://www.myspace.com/aislingbeing" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; http://www.myspace.com/wigginsmaroo" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; http://www.mp3.com.au/artist.asp?id=10004" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
I had downloaded Audacity at one point to do some noise filtering as opposed to Sound Soap. The problem is it crashed A LOT! So I got frustrated and stopped using it.
I think it would have to be something built in to DP to make it work. The plugin format might be tough, although not necessarily impossible. Given the way the Process() loop works in an AU, I'm not sure you'd have access to future data easily for speeding up tracks. (For past you could just save it)
Duh! OK, I give up. I just know I'm going to feel an absolute turkey, but I'm danged if I can see which of the Soundhack plugs would produce that 'slow down the record' effect. Anyone care to enlighten an old kangaroo wrangler with the limited IQ of one who has not yet had his morning caffeine fix?
Hahaha, you know what's funny? I did the same thing when I went to the site. You actually want the program called 'SoundHack' from the right side of the columns, not the plugins (although they look intriguing as well).
It's NOT a plugin, it's a stand-alone application.
I used that effect once...it pretty easy to do with 'live'. You can set a sample to either pitch to the track, or set it to repitch...it acts like a record...if the tempo slow down, so does the sample...best of all...no artifacts.
There's an audio-suite plug-in in Pro-Tools called 'vari-fi' which does exactly what you're after. it only has two settings - speed up from nothing or slow down to nothing. I've used it quite a bit and it's great. If you know someone who has Pro Tools LE, they could maybe do it for you and email you the resulting .wav file.
DP 9.52 Mac Pro 10.14.6 RME fireface800. Sibelius. Dorico 4
Just curious, to any Melodyne users out there... could Melodyne be used to do the same thing? Could you continously wind-down the pitch and the speed simultaneously and simulate a spinning disk slowing down?
Shooshie
|l|OS X 10.12.6 |l| DP 10.0|l|2.4 GHz 12-Core MacPro Mid-2012|l|40GB RAM|l|Mach5.3|l|Waves 9.x|l|Altiverb|l|Ivory 2 New York Steinway |l|Wallander WIVI 2.30 Winds, Brass, Saxes|l|Garritan Aria|l|VSL 5.3.1 and VSL Pro 2.3.1 |l|Yamaha WX-5 MIDI Wind Controller|l|Roland FC-300|l|
Frodo wrote:Someone else asked about this. All I could find was Audacity with their Turntablewarp plugin:
Good call, Frods.
Someone did ask a couple of weeks ago.
This was my solutiion, much to the delight of all and sundry.
Unless I've missed something crucial here, it should suffice.