Lasse Lammert
HCAF Blitzkrieg
Trigger pad of 5ms, equal gain fade (the default) 5ms. Fades are always just to the left of the grid line, never over top of transients.
10ms triggerpad works better (generally triggerpad=2xxfade works best)
Trigger pad of 5ms, equal gain fade (the default) 5ms. Fades are always just to the left of the grid line, never over top of transients.
10ms triggerpad works better (generally triggerpad=2xxfade works best)
Maybe this is just false advertising for the video, but from groove3.com:
"Kenny Gioia has done it again! This time Kenny focuses on Pro Tools 7.4s incredible Elastic Time feature. You'll be amazed by how much you can bend and twist audio with no weird sounding artifacts when correctly using Elastic Time. Kenny shows you how on multi-tracked drums, bass, guitars, vocals, and more!"
I think for someone who's mostly doing simple rock/pop drums, straight 4/4 with hardly any fills, EA probably sounds fine. But yes it can get messy dealing with busy technical stuff... which sucks because you're right, it is so easy.
for that matter, one pass with BD would probably nail the entire song perfect first try
true. I actually used to work at a bigger studio where the Jonas Brothers tracked their second album. The session drummer was so good that the producer would select the entire song, separate, conform, take a 5 minute break while it was doing the fades then come back and start tracking guitars. didn't even check the drum tracks once, i watched the screen and hardly anything moved... must be nice working with that on a regular basis.
Also I have a feeling joey will be riding the 'Tab to Transient' and manual cutting. Beat Detective is more of a batch process, and you get finer control doing it manually.
Just wondering, if the drummer is in fact that good, why would you BD at all? I've worked with a guy like that twice and honestly just did about 1 punch per song and called it a day.