I have to join the choir and say thanks, this is fantastic. I'm pretty new to the recording world, and after months of learning to use LUNA, I hadn't stumbled into a single discussion of tempo mapping. So, big thanks for introducing the concept. I tend to write a lot of stuff on guitar that's not exactly "locked in", or with weird and shifting time signatures, so I've always felt like I'm fighting with these DAWs. This at least gives some flexibility to just play rather than spend too much time programming a click track. Not that I don't see the value in that too, but man, this is great.
Love your videos best channel involving UA/Luna, you have helped me move forward with mixing a lot as a beginner. Wondering if you will be doing any tutorials or mixing demo using side chain weather to be native or third party? Keep rockin!!!
Thanks this was very interesting. I want to be able to take a guitar part laid down by a guy who absolutely freaked out on me when I suggested he play to a click track and build a drum pattern from that. Best Tod :)
Great tutorial. I am use to doing time-alignment in Pro Tools. Usually splicing the audio and using Beat Detective. I have a couple time-alignment jobs to complete and I may just opt for using LUNA for the editing job. LUNA is my main DAW now but I figured Pro Tools still had the edge on time-alignment. My only concern is, one band has requested that I do not use time-stretching for their drum edits. Which I normally avoid anyway. Could I get a similar workflow to this but by splicing the audio in LUNA rather than using a warp algorithm? Or should I just stick to Pro Tools for this edit? Thanks for any advice!
I have to join the choir and say thanks, this is fantastic.
I'm pretty new to the recording world, and after months of learning to use LUNA, I hadn't stumbled into a single discussion of tempo mapping. So, big thanks for introducing the concept.
I tend to write a lot of stuff on guitar that's not exactly "locked in", or with weird and shifting time signatures, so I've always felt like I'm fighting with these DAWs. This at least gives some flexibility to just play rather than spend too much time programming a click track.
Not that I don't see the value in that too, but man, this is great.
Really helpful. Thank you!
Brillant Tutorial! Thanks for showing!
Thanks for the good explained tutorials!
Good morning, hope you're doing well. You always make such amazing videos. Make it a awesome weekend and looking forward to the next video
Great video! I never would have thought of making a tempo map and then use the quantize slightly to grab any wonky bits. Brilliant.
Thank you
Thanks for all your Luna Tutorials
Love your videos best channel involving UA/Luna, you have helped me move forward with mixing a lot as a beginner.
Wondering if you will be doing any tutorials or mixing demo using side chain weather to be native or third party?
Keep rockin!!!
Thanks this was very interesting. I want to be able to take a guitar part laid down by a guy who absolutely freaked out on me when I suggested he play to a click track and build a drum pattern from that. Best Tod :)
Awesome video man ! Thanks. Would love to work with you sometime
Great tutorial. I am use to doing time-alignment in Pro Tools. Usually splicing the audio and using Beat Detective. I have a couple time-alignment jobs to complete and I may just opt for using LUNA for the editing job. LUNA is my main DAW now but I figured Pro Tools still had the edge on time-alignment. My only concern is, one band has requested that I do not use time-stretching for their drum edits. Which I normally avoid anyway. Could I get a similar workflow to this but by splicing the audio in LUNA rather than using a warp algorithm? Or should I just stick to Pro Tools for this edit? Thanks for any advice!
Ableton style arranger would be 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 for Luna .. Think about it
Can this be done with midi tracks?
What’s the command to find the transient?
[TAB] to go to the next transient.