Hey, I speak Greek !!! Yes it’s true I am American and I speak 4 languages... whaaaat? Got a gig in Greece and learnt 25 words a day, did that for about 5 months, then lived there for 7 years. So in this case, this was “all Greek to me”. I understood it perfectly. Thanks Marv (get it?,...Marvelous) Steve
I find myself re-educating myself with Beat Detective and found your tutorial here. You seem to have always had a gift for communicating extremely well even when getting into the details. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience to help us sir. You Rock!
my tutor showed me how to use this and I had no idea what he was talking about until I just watched this!...Thank the lord for my fellow brit.. good work warren, please keep em coming. Much love from the Garden of England.
I used to edit drums using elastic audio. I had completely forgotten the Beat detective and it works a thousand times better . Thanks for the excellent tutorial!
Hi +Andrés Gil Great stuff! So glad to be able too help! Yes Elastic leaves too many artifacts for me! Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren
Warren you are not only a gifted producer and engineer but teacher as well, this is the best tutorial I've seen in editing drums! Being a drummer myself you have no idea how much I appreciate these videos! Cheers!
Just wanted to tell you that such a seemingly unimportant thing as using the suspend/enable groups shortcut has drastically improved my workflow. Thanks!!
+Do not Question Authority Also, you could benefit from the Shift + ; shortcut to extend selection when re-enabling groups (After doing the analysis on the Kick+Snare). It feels more natural to do Cmd+Shift+G and then Shift + ; and it saves you another click.
Until today I didn't know how to go about doing this even though on feedback Friday we were called out on timing. We recently recorded a gig and this tutorial is a god send! You rock Warren, this is so easy to understand and I will be easily able to time align the drums for the 6 songs no problem.
Warren, thank you for sharing this. In the past I have used Elastic Time on drums with mixed results. Your explanation of Beat Detective has been enlightening - far better than any I have seen in the past - and I can't wait to try it. Thanks, so very much.
Fantastic instruction, Warren. I feel the big takeaway here is not using the OH/Rooms for timing marker reference when analyzing and to instead to use the key groove elements (kick, snare) for that.
Thanks for this excelent and accurate explanation Warren! I love the confidence and effectiveness of all your tutorial videos. You are a walking library sir 🙌
YESS been using this for years but never knew you could just use fundamental tracks like kick and snare as trigger points, and then add the cymbals in right before the Separation phase. THANK
If I could give you thousands of thumbs up i would you are the master!! Thank you so much! I really like the part about retaining the swing of the percussive elements such as the hi-hats! Just awesome! :D
@@Producelikeapro No problem i am a student at uni right now and doing a pro tools module, so thanks to you i fully understand this concept, seriously bruv, you rock! I cant believe you give for free!
Awesome! I've always used Elastic Time to do that but I find that it creates a lot of artifacts sometimes. But after watching how you work with beat detective I think I'll incorporate this workflow into my edit work. Thanks!
Thanks NiklasJBlixt! I've used elastic time as well, but I find the phase alignment gets messed up using it. Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren
Hi +James Moscardini Great! Yes. that's a great tip I picked from Bryan Carlstrom years ago! Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
I know this an older video but I want to know if you have to map the tempo first with songs not recorded to click before using this? If the tempo sways all over the place do you leave it or map what it should be first and then apply Beat Detective? You are the best Warren, I’ve learned so much from you!
Very well Put on how to best use Beat Detective! I had a q: How do you approach using beat Detective, when you need to quantise an entire session to the grid . Say Drums, Guitars, vocals , bass- all recorded live.
Hey Warren, just discovered this from the subscriber e-mail. You have legit saved me hours of editing, I've been doing it manually! I noticed on the first 6 bars you used the floor tom track to search for transients as well, but in the next 12 it was just the kick and snare. Was the first one a mistake and you'd get main body right i.e kick/snare and fix up the toms manually if need be?
Hi +Kaleb Treacy Thanks very much for your great comment I really appreciate it! If there isn't any tom performances then I don't include them in the search for transients. I hope that helps! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
You are great! Very straightforward explanation. Very good!. Question: often we deal with relative fast drums fills, which might not be very precisely "on grid". Now, how efficient the beat detective is to correct such cases? Shall we rather treat such cases (I mean every single transient of a complex drum fill) manually? Thanks a lot!
Please check out my How To Edit Drums with Beat Detective video on www.producelikeapro.com If you sign up for the email list you will get a link to the Drum files to download so you too can edit them! Have a marvelous day!
Hi +funkyadhesive that's a great question! I know Recycle does basic drum editing of loops etc, but I don;t know how tracks it can handle? Anyone else have any ideas on great VST drum editing software? Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Always a great source of knowledge... Would you recommend doing this before tracking other instruments or if you're in a situation where everything is tracked does this effect the other instruments timing relation?
Hi, I used this workflow and it worked great however small green triangles have appeared. They seem to align with certain transients and is on each of the track in same possition, so there would be one on the kick track and then one the snare ect in the same point in the track. The drums sound in time now though. Anyways thank you so much great video
Hey Warren! Thanks for the video. I found it clear and informative. One question; what exactly does the “fades” step do? I can’t really hear a difference between before and after you did that last step.
Love this video Warren. I just used it again..a year after my last post. Used it to edit the drum groove on a tune I'm working on for a new EP. Followed your system outlined here..and it worked perfectly. Many thanks!!
Thanks Warren!!! Little tricks here and there that most likely will make me proficient on BD. Haven't tried them all yet... One question for you and everybody else: I am on PT 12.7 and I noticed that if I don't cut down files/tracks into sections (as you do @ 10'03") , remaining whole files slightly slip on the timeline and consequently on the grid. Has this ever occurred to anyone? Am I doing something wrong? Thanks again, marvellously!
Great video! i use this technique a lot. But i've recently gotten a ton of work where the client is REALLY particular about getting edits as slammed on the grid as possible. You technique for editing drums is great except for the fact that all the songs i've been getting, the drums hit at different times on different mics. even when nudging over the room mics to match the close mics, they still come off of each other down the road here and there. so slicing the entire drum group isn't an option, and i've been going in track by track....ugh. i don't imagine there's an easier way, but if there is, i'd love to know!
Hi +Andrew Olive Tree Mixing Great question! You should still edit in group ode as I do then consolidate and if you want t adjust phase do it afterwards. The relationship between the mics stays constant soother's no need to go out of group. Does that makes sense? Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
Yeah I figured as much. The guys I'm doing some editing for sent me a screenshot saying they wanted EVERYTHING on the grid, which I thought was strange. But after trying it, it sounded phasey and unnatural so I just went back to the way I've been doing it, which is the same way you explain in your excellent video. Thanks for the response
Hi there. Great video. Thank you very much for your content. I was wondering if using beat detective is strictly only for audio that has been recorded to a click track? I imagine the result are far better if the original performance was recorded to a click. Thanks, Cam.
Great video Warren. It's still useful 5 yeras later! I just used it today to edit the drums on a new tune I'm working on (they needed a slight bit of tightening to the grid). Your techniques worked like a charm! Thanks ever so much!!
Excellent Warren, great job, maybe cos we speak the same language (cough’ proper English, which is hilarious as I’m a scouser, inside joke fellas ha ha!) but I do find your vids clear concise and uncluttered, now if only I could find where I put my pencil......
Warren. I've watched your videos and want to fully understand this. If you receive drum tracks from a band and there are phase issues... would you use beat detective to quantize the drum part, THEN use the time adjuster to put them in phase? Or would you want to time adjust THEN quantize? Does it matter which way you go about doing these? Thank you. Keep up the great work.
Hi +Harvey Thibault Great question! Duplicate the playlist then edit them, then adjust the edited tracks last! Thanks very much I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Hi +Harvey Thibault Yes Sir! Playlist so you have an edited one! Thanks very much I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
As always, a feast of information!! I'm addicted to Produce like a pro!! keeps me sane on tour, thanks Warren!!! A quick question though, do you do anything to the drum tracks before beat detective, i.e. strip silence to clean up bleed a bit to make Beat Detective less prone to picking up wayward hits? anything like that? Thanks again!!
Hi Russ Miller wow Thanks very much for your kind words I really appreciate it! If I am using Beat Detective and I recorded the drums then I don't usually have much issue with bleed as I don;t overly compress to tape, in fact only the kick in and snare top in most instances have any compression on them. However if I had to edit someone else drums that have been overly compressed I might clean it up first, but if it's really badly compressed then any edits might have to be done by hand, which is a little time consuming but I used to always edit like that before Beat Detective was available. Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Produce Like A Pro Thank you for the reply Warren, and greetings from the UK, you are NOT missing much! That's great info, and is pretty much the scenario I'm in with this track, thanks again!
Hi +jamesnyttemusic Great question! Whichever way you work just make sure you playlist the tracks so there is always an unaltered track to return to. Personally if I were aligning the tracks in phase I might do that first then edit and the chop points would be more accurate. Happy New Year! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Hi Warren, thank you for the video as usual. I have a question now. You set the trigger pad at 15ms. That means your drums transients sits behind the the cut. And if you quantize them, it will be quantized by the cut line. and you'll have all your drums quantized 15ms behind. Am I right? or do i got it wrong?
Hi +kangband Thanks for the great question! No the trigger point is the transient and that is what gets snapped to the grid, the cut is in front of that! I hope that helps? Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Hi Warren, great tutorial. I tried using this just now, but I'm having some trouble as my drummer is playing various ghost notes and odd time signatures. How would I edit the parts so that they sound natural?
I record my music using a microphone plugged into a VHS tape player onto a blank tape. I output the music from the VHS player's RCA output into my computer's mic input on it's sound card using an RCA to 1/8" adapter. I open up "sound recorder" in my Windows 95 PC. Here's it's specs: 133 MHz Pentium (1) processor 8 megabytes of RAM 256 kilobyte video RAM 3 gigabyte hard drive the sound quality is ~*SuPeRb*~ it sounds better than a high end pro tools interface
rolaca11 Hell yeah man, I can overdub my tracks also. What I do is I record one instrument at a time in "sound recorder" and then I open up a new window of "sound recorder" for each instrument and then I press play on all of the windows as fast as I can so that way they are in synch. Then I use another program to capture my soundcards audio. Voila! Multi track recording rig
Yeah, I plug a mic into my guitar amp that has a pedal board with compression effects hooked up to it using an XLR to 1/4" adapter into the input and then I mic the amp with the microphone that's fed into the VHS recorder. Sometimes it doesn't work properly, so I'll use a tape recorder instead. I can do multitracking also, I get a second tape recorder and playback the track after I record it and pick up the audio into the other tape recorder while I play the new track on my guitar, well it's sort of a guitar. It's a ukele fitted with metal strings tuned EADG, I use a sound hole pickup fed into an amp with distortion for metal tracks
At 9:31 in the video you deal with a transient that is clipped off due to previous editing. Why don't you just use the trim tool and then handle that section with Beat Detective instead of Snap to Grid?
I get a message overtime i try to conform it says " This Operation will move clips to a new location. The destination is based upon the session's bar|beat ruler. do you want to proceed?" then it give me the option to conform or cancel and every time i press conform it gets all messed up. My start beat and end beat match, and the are both on 1/8 notes. =(
Hi Dre Urquidi thanks for the question. Try editing on 1/4th notes not 1/8th notes and it should be able to read them. Make sure the Start and End read exactly the same as the markers above. Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren Huart
So when you don't edit hi hats or other particular tracks with the drums as a whole, wouldn't it cause phasing issues? Specific parts are gridded and other aren't?
Hey Warren ... in Conform .. How can spaces appear between the transients... ? Is it deleting unnecessary parts of the drum tail ? .. or is it shrinking the length of the hit to make room to move it ??? thx
Hi Michael Palmquist thanks for the great question! I'm using the R and T letters with the AZ button enabled. Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren
I know I’m 8 years late. But I’m mixing a song for a client and on certain parts of the drums when I use beat detective it like makes it sound worse. I can’t seem to figure out why it changes it so drastically.
Hi! Exelent video. Thanks a lot. I do have a question. Im having problems editing djent metal drumtracks which have a lot of BD and SD while constant cymbals are beeing played. I get a lot of noise and kind of a "sweeping sound" in the Overheads channel. Any suggestion? thank you!
Probably the best explanation on editing drums ive ever seen. Thanks for taking the Greek out of it Warren.
Hi +Sean Hebert Aw shucks! Thanks very much for your kind words I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Hey, I speak Greek !!!
Yes it’s true I am American and I speak 4 languages... whaaaat?
Got a gig in Greece and learnt 25 words a day, did that for about 5 months, then lived there for 7 years.
So in this case, this was “all Greek to me”. I understood it perfectly.
Thanks Marv (get it?,...Marvelous)
Steve
Its perfect explanation!!!
Years later and still is an awesome tutorial! Thank u
Thanks ever so much
I find myself re-educating myself with Beat Detective and found your tutorial here. You seem to have always had a gift for communicating extremely well even when getting into the details.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience to help us sir. You Rock!
Wow! Thanks ever so much
Please check out the video on how I use Beat Detective in this video. Have marvelous day!
my tutor showed me how to use this and I had no idea what he was talking about until I just watched this!...Thank the lord for my fellow brit.. good work warren, please keep em coming. Much love from the Garden of England.
Hello Alex in Kent! That's wonderful to hear my friend! Glad to be able to help!!
That was the best Beat Detective lesson ever. Thanks so much.
Hi MoatsBrothers thanks very much for the kind words! Very glad I can be of help! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
I used to edit drums using elastic audio. I had completely forgotten the Beat detective and it works a thousand times better . Thanks for the excellent tutorial!
Hi +Andrés Gil Great stuff! So glad to be able too help! Yes Elastic leaves too many artifacts for me! Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren
Warren you are not only a gifted producer and engineer but teacher as well, this is the best tutorial I've seen in editing drums! Being a drummer myself you have no idea how much I appreciate these videos! Cheers!
Just wanted to tell you that such a seemingly unimportant thing as using the suspend/enable groups shortcut has drastically improved my workflow. Thanks!!
+Do not Question Authority Also, you could benefit from the Shift + ; shortcut to extend selection when re-enabling groups (After doing the analysis on the Kick+Snare). It feels more natural to do Cmd+Shift+G and then Shift + ; and it saves you another click.
Hi +Do not Question Authority I love key short cuts! Makes my life so much easier!! Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
Ditto, Especially on my new laptop.
Please check out my how to use Beat Detective video, let me know any tips you may have as well! Have a marvelous day! Many thanks Warren
Finally! a work flow that makes sense to me. Separating for only kick snare and toms is brilliant. Thank you!
Until today I didn't know how to go about doing this even though on feedback Friday we were called out on timing. We recently recorded a gig and this tutorial is a god send! You rock Warren, this is so easy to understand and I will be easily able to time align the drums for the 6 songs no problem.
Warren, thank you for sharing this. In the past I have used Elastic Time on drums with mixed results. Your explanation of Beat Detective has been enlightening - far better than any I have seen in the past - and I can't wait to try it. Thanks, so very much.
Thanks for watching Rick Lucier! I really appreciate your comments! Many thanks Warren
Fantastic instruction, Warren. I feel the big takeaway here is not using the OH/Rooms for timing marker reference when analyzing and to instead to use the key groove elements (kick, snare) for that.
Thanks for this excelent and accurate explanation Warren! I love the confidence and effectiveness of all your tutorial videos. You are a walking library sir 🙌
YESS been using this for years but never knew you could just use fundamental tracks like kick and snare as trigger points, and then add the cymbals in right before the Separation phase. THANK
What can I say? Warren you are an angel. Thank you very much for your tutorials.
This was AWESOME and so clearly explained. Thank you!!
Wow!! Thanks ever so much
@@Producelikeapro Finally got it and understood a great workflow 👌🏼 Thank YOU!
Thank you so much, the suspended groups and the trigger pad made all the difference!
Hi +Rodrigo Pex Fantastic! Glad to be able to help! Thanks very much I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
This is an excellent refresher course of Beat detective, easy to understand and follow. Thank you very much
Thanks a lot Warren! You`re the most friendliest person on youtube! :-) Thank you for taking the time to make this kind of videos!!!
If I could give you thousands of thumbs up i would you are the master!! Thank you so much! I really like the part about retaining the swing of the percussive elements such as the hi-hats! Just awesome! :D
Wow!! Thanks ever so much
@@Producelikeapro No problem i am a student at uni right now and doing a pro tools module, so thanks to you i fully understand this concept, seriously bruv, you rock! I cant believe you give for free!
Brilliant tut Warren, useful and straight to the point! You definitely made my day.
I know you've worked with the best of the best studio drummers in the world. Is there any of them that need no editing whatsoever?
Warren you are a gentleman and a scholar!
So helpful. Thanks Warren! Definitely going to seek your advice in the future.
HI +Gareth Bothma Of course! Glad to be able to help! Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
Thank you! Beat Detective is finally making sense.
watching you do this with a trackpad is giving me anxiety but you're nailing it
the best tutorial for beat detective ! thank you so much warren :D
Hi +DANIEL POD Thanks very much for your great comment I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
+Produce Like A Pro same goes to you Warren .. cheers from malaysia !
Hi +DANIEL POD Thanks very much for your kind words I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
thank you so much for this. Been needing to learn how it works
Hi +dasdrums Wonderful! I'm so glad to be able to help! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Thank you for making this video! Really cleared things up for me.
Awesome! I've always used Elastic Time to do that but I find that it creates a lot of artifacts sometimes. But after watching how you work with beat detective I think I'll incorporate this workflow into my edit work. Thanks!
Thanks NiklasJBlixt! I've used elastic time as well, but I find the phase alignment gets messed up using it. Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren
Hey Warren thank you for this, drum editing has always been such a time consuming mystery before this video!
Thanks for the straightforward runthrough, this made BD make sense. Cheers!
Thank you, clearly explained
Thanks ever so much
Man buddy...i really appreciate your content!
Very helpful video…. thanks Warren
Great video! Very detailed. Thank you!
Hi +Gus P Music Thanks very much for your kind words I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Warren, the trigger pad made a huge difference to my work flow! Thanks!
Hi +James Moscardini Great! Yes. that's a great tip I picked from Bryan Carlstrom years ago! Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
Thank you Warren!
Thanks Steve! My pleasure!
Thank you so much! Best regards from DK
Best tutorial ! you explained the concept ! appreciate it !
I know this an older video but I want to know if you have to map the tempo first with songs not recorded to click before using this? If the tempo sways all over the place do you leave it or map what it should be first and then apply Beat Detective? You are the best Warren, I’ve learned so much from you!
I FINALLY GET IT! Thank you Warren!
Very well Put on how to best use Beat Detective!
I had a q: How do you approach using beat Detective, when you need to quantise an entire session to the grid . Say Drums, Guitars, vocals , bass- all recorded live.
thanks for the tutorial - doing marvelous work over there !
Hi +BrandonX76 Thanks YOU!! Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
Hey Warren, just discovered this from the subscriber e-mail. You have legit saved me hours of editing, I've been doing it manually! I noticed on the first 6 bars you used the floor tom track to search for transients as well, but in the next 12 it was just the kick and snare. Was the first one a mistake and you'd get main body right i.e kick/snare and fix up the toms manually if need be?
Hi +Kaleb Treacy Thanks very much for your great comment I really appreciate it! If there isn't any tom performances then I don't include them in the search for transients. I hope that helps! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
You are great! Very straightforward explanation. Very good!. Question: often we deal with relative fast drums fills, which might not be very precisely "on grid". Now, how efficient the beat detective is to correct such cases? Shall we rather treat such cases (I mean every single transient of a complex drum fill) manually? Thanks a lot!
Awesome channel! Subscribed! Keep up the great work!
thank you, you have helped me a lot with this tutorial
Fantastic tutorial, thanks!
Please check out my How To Edit Drums with Beat Detective video on www.producelikeapro.com If you sign up for the email list you will get a link to the Drum files to download so you too can edit them! Have a marvelous day!
Helpful stuff.
I'm not a protools user, do you know of any free VST equivalents to Beat Detective?
Hi +funkyadhesive that's a great question! I know Recycle does basic drum editing of loops etc, but I don;t know how tracks it can handle? Anyone else have any ideas on great VST drum editing software? Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Always a great source of knowledge... Would you recommend doing this before tracking other instruments or if you're in a situation where everything is tracked does this effect the other instruments timing relation?
thanks you ! Amazing Tutorial ! Worked awesomely for me :P
Hi, I used this workflow and it worked great however small green triangles have appeared. They seem to align with certain transients and is on each of the track in same possition, so there would be one on the kick track and then one the snare ect in the same point in the track. The drums sound in time now though. Anyways thank you so much great video
Hey Warren! Thanks for the video. I found it clear and informative. One question; what exactly does the “fades” step do? I can’t really hear a difference between before and after you did that last step.
THANK YOU!
You’re very welcome
warren you da man!
Thanks ever so much
AWESOME!!! Thank you again Warren!!!
Thanks Luiz Ronconi! I really appreciate it! Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren
Excellent tutorial! Thank YOU, ever so much, Warren! (-:
Great video, helped me a lot
You are a GENIUS
Warren. Quick question. What value do you suggest for swing if you want to let the drums be just a tad loser than exact grid?
Love this video Warren. I just used it again..a year after my last post. Used it to edit the drum groove on a tune I'm working on for a new EP. Followed your system outlined here..and it worked perfectly. Many thanks!!
Thanks Warren!!! Little tricks here and there that most likely will make me proficient on BD. Haven't tried them all yet... One question for you and everybody else: I am on PT 12.7 and I noticed that if I don't cut down files/tracks into sections (as you do @ 10'03") , remaining whole files slightly slip on the timeline and consequently on the grid. Has this ever occurred to anyone? Am I doing something wrong? Thanks again, marvellously!
Great video! i use this technique a lot. But i've recently gotten a ton of work where the client is REALLY particular about getting edits as slammed on the grid as possible. You technique for editing drums is great except for the fact that all the songs i've been getting, the drums hit at different times on different mics. even when nudging over the room mics to match the close mics, they still come off of each other down the road here and there. so slicing the entire drum group isn't an option, and i've been going in track by track....ugh. i don't imagine there's an easier way, but if there is, i'd love to know!
Hi +Andrew Olive Tree Mixing Great question! You should still edit in group ode as I do then consolidate and if you want t adjust phase do it afterwards. The relationship between the mics stays constant soother's no need to go out of group. Does that makes sense? Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
Yeah I figured as much. The guys I'm doing some editing for sent me a screenshot saying they wanted EVERYTHING on the grid, which I thought was strange. But after trying it, it sounded phasey and unnatural so I just went back to the way I've been doing it, which is the same way you explain in your excellent video. Thanks for the response
Hi +Andrew Olive Tree Mixing Ok phew! I'm glad that worked out!! Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
Hi there. Great video. Thank you very much for your content. I was wondering if using beat detective is strictly only for audio that has been recorded to a click track? I imagine the result are far better if the original performance was recorded to a click. Thanks, Cam.
thank you!
You're welcome!
Great video Warren. It's still useful 5 yeras later! I just used it today to edit the drums on a new tune I'm working on (they needed a slight bit of tightening to the grid). Your techniques worked like a charm! Thanks ever so much!!
Great tutorial Expert! I have another way to edit drums by using Event Operations, can I share with you?
Hi +Thái Sơn Nguyễn Great stuff! Please do! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Can you do a. Video on superior drummer 3 . Routing and mixing
Great tutorial Warren;)
Love you buddy!
Thanks very much
Excellent Warren, great job, maybe cos we speak the same language (cough’ proper English, which is hilarious as I’m a scouser, inside joke fellas ha ha!) but I do find your vids clear concise and uncluttered, now if only I could find where I put my pencil......
Thank you so much!
very helpful, thanks!
thanks a lot for your knowlegde and for sharing it
Warren. I've watched your videos and want to fully understand this. If you receive drum tracks from a band and there are phase issues... would you use beat detective to quantize the drum part, THEN use the time adjuster to put them in phase? Or would you want to time adjust THEN quantize? Does it matter which way you go about doing these? Thank you. Keep up the great work.
Hi +Harvey Thibault Great question! Duplicate the playlist then edit them, then adjust the edited tracks last! Thanks very much I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Excellent. So once you've consolidated, time adjust? Thanks so much.
Hi +Harvey Thibault Yes Sir! Playlist so you have an edited one! Thanks very much I really appreciate it! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
As always, a feast of information!! I'm addicted to Produce like a pro!! keeps me sane on tour, thanks Warren!!!
A quick question though, do you do anything to the drum tracks before beat detective, i.e. strip silence to clean up bleed a bit to make Beat Detective less prone to picking up wayward hits? anything like that?
Thanks again!!
Hi Russ Miller wow Thanks very much for your kind words I really appreciate it! If I am using Beat Detective and I recorded the drums then I don't usually have much issue with bleed as I don;t overly compress to tape, in fact only the kick in and snare top in most instances have any compression on them. However if I had to edit someone else drums that have been overly compressed I might clean it up first, but if it's really badly compressed then any edits might have to be done by hand, which is a little time consuming but I used to always edit like that before Beat Detective was available. Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Produce Like A Pro Thank you for the reply Warren, and greetings from the UK, you are NOT missing much!
That's great info, and is pretty much the scenario I'm in with this track, thanks again!
Hi Russ Miller say hi to Ol' Blighty for me! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Hi Warren! Would you recommend doing this step before or after phase-locking all the tracks (with time alignment)?
Hi +jamesnyttemusic Great question! Whichever way you work just make sure you playlist the tracks so there is always an unaltered track to return to. Personally if I were aligning the tracks in phase I might do that first then edit and the chop points would be more accurate. Happy New Year! Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Great video!
I NEED TO STUDY YOU!!!
Hi Warren, thank you for the video as usual. I have a question now. You set the trigger pad at 15ms. That means your drums transients sits behind the the cut. And if you quantize them, it will be quantized by the cut line. and you'll have all your drums quantized 15ms behind. Am I right? or do i got it wrong?
Hi +kangband Thanks for the great question! No the trigger point is the transient and that is what gets snapped to the grid, the cut is in front of that! I hope that helps? Have a marvellous time recording, many thanks Warren
Oh now I see it. Thanks Warren for the kind comment.
Hi Warren, great tutorial. I tried using this just now, but I'm having some trouble as my drummer is playing various ghost notes and odd time signatures. How would I edit the parts so that they sound natural?
I record my music using a microphone plugged into a VHS tape player onto a blank tape. I output the music from the VHS player's RCA output into my computer's mic input on it's sound card using an RCA to 1/8" adapter. I open up "sound recorder" in my Windows 95 PC. Here's it's specs:
133 MHz Pentium (1) processor
8 megabytes of RAM
256 kilobyte video RAM
3 gigabyte hard drive
the sound quality is ~*SuPeRb*~ it sounds better than a high end pro tools interface
do you even 2016 bro? :D
rolaca11 Hell yeah man, I can overdub my tracks also. What I do is I record one instrument at a time in "sound recorder" and then I open up a new window of "sound recorder" for each instrument and then I press play on all of the windows as fast as I can so that way they are in synch. Then I use another program to capture my soundcards audio. Voila! Multi track recording rig
I bet you can do manual compression as well.
I'm telling you, no computer can beat a real man handling the gain knob
Yeah, I plug a mic into my guitar amp that has a pedal board with compression effects hooked up to it using an XLR to 1/4" adapter into the input and then I mic the amp with the microphone that's fed into the VHS recorder. Sometimes it doesn't work properly, so I'll use a tape recorder instead. I can do multitracking also, I get a second tape recorder and playback the track after I record it and pick up the audio into the other tape recorder while I play the new track on my guitar, well it's sort of a guitar. It's a ukele fitted with metal strings tuned EADG, I use a sound hole pickup fed into an amp with distortion for metal tracks
You’re awesome !!!
I thought I was a mad scientist, but CLEARLY I have met my match !!!
Bravooooooo
Thank you so much for these videos. Greatly appreciated! \m/
Hi Pablo, thanks very much! So glad you enjoy the videos!! Have a marvellous time recording and mixing, many thanks Warren
You are great Keep on plz
Just wondering if beat detective procedures have changed since you posted this video 5 years ago?
Negatory! Stil the same technique
Hello there, let's say we do have our room mics in our playlist, shouldn't we time em to the grid as well?
At 9:31 in the video you deal with a transient that is clipped off due to previous editing. Why don't you just use the trim tool and then handle that section with Beat Detective instead of Snap to Grid?
I get a message overtime i try to conform it says " This Operation will move clips to a new location. The destination is based upon the session's bar|beat ruler. do you want to proceed?" then it give me the option to conform or cancel and every time i press conform it gets all messed up. My start beat and end beat match, and the are both on 1/8 notes. =(
Hi Dre Urquidi thanks for the question. Try editing on 1/4th notes not 1/8th notes and it should be able to read them. Make sure the Start and End read exactly the same as the markers above. Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren Huart
So when you don't edit hi hats or other particular tracks with the drums as a whole, wouldn't it cause phasing issues? Specific parts are gridded and other aren't?
Everything is edited as a group, so the relationship between the mics stay consistent
Hey Warren ... in Conform .. How can spaces appear between the transients... ? Is it deleting unnecessary parts of the drum tail ? .. or is it shrinking the length of the hit to make room to move it ??? thx
How are you going to single zoom mode tool so fast? Is there a key command?
Hi Michael Palmquist thanks for the great question! I'm using the R and T letters with the AZ button enabled. Have a marvelous time recording! Many thanks Warren
Fab vid m8!
Thanks a lot!!!
is suspending the group and selecting the specific tracks kick, snare ect. more efficient then using collective mode?
I know I’m 8 years late. But I’m mixing a song for a client and on certain parts of the drums when I use beat detective it like makes it sound worse. I can’t seem to figure out why it changes it so drastically.
Hi! Exelent video. Thanks a lot. I do have a question. Im having problems editing djent metal drumtracks which have a lot of BD and SD while constant cymbals are beeing played. I get a lot of noise and kind of a "sweeping sound" in the Overheads channel. Any suggestion? thank you!