I'm planning on purchasing Opus 1. Only one thing is holding me back..my fear of not being able to make it sound good even with the great sounds...because I don't understand 75% of what you guys discuss on the forum. I know how to load performance files with the instrument gigs I want to use, I know how to compose and have my notation/sequencer work properly with Gigastudio for patch changes and all that jazz. Here's where I'm afraid my knowledge dies. I don't have the resources to run multiple (bus outs as you call it to mixers and multiple computers and reverb units.)
I do everything on 1 PC. A Pentium 4, 2.66Ghz with 1GB of RAM, an Audiophile 2496 and a Soundblaster Audigy. I use Finale to compose, and just started using Gigastudio instead of hardware units that I had used forever. (I never did much in the way of mixing and mastering before.) The only way I can really record well is with the capture to wave.
I tried to run the NFX reverb when recording, but it was lackluster in comparison to your demos, and put my CPU usage well above 50%. So I tried Sound Forge with Acoustic Mirror. Now I'm only using demo sounds, but I can still fake a composition to try it out using what notes I have in an instrument. Here's what I need desperate help with:
I like the Vienna results when you guys do your thing with reverb and panning on your demos and posts much better than anything else I've heard...seems much more flexible, but if I don't understand how to make a good demo CD with your product, then the EASTWEST recorded reverb and panning (if I understand it correctly) would be better for a newbie like me.
If you are going to use only gigastudio and capture to wave to record a dry wav. Open it in Sound Forge and do some normalizing and Acoustic Mirroring...I don't know how to EQ for realism,
what do I do in Gigastudio to get accurate panning? I understand why I pan and where I want instruments to come from sonic-wise, but I don't understand the best way to do it.
I've read on the forum "pan in DSP, not the MIDI mixer"
If I do that I have a left and a right slider...both without any numbers to guide me on how much I have actually panned" How do I know I am properly placing them in the field. I'm not seeing an angle here. What helps me create that sense of distance in instruments seated back farther..."collapse the stereo field" aren't those the sliders I'm messing with for panning...how do you narrow the field and pan with two sliders that have no numbers and are less then an inch long?
I hate to ask all these questions...but it seems this is child's play to most of the people here...and while the posts seem general to you...its still beyond me. And before I spend a grand on a great product, I want to have faith that I can make it sound at least newbie good. I realize that skill will come with practice, and that you guys didn't suddenly learn great mixing through osmosis, but if you could answer a few questions in dumby form for me, I would feel much more comfortable with my learning curve.
All I want to do is set-up a performance file after purchasing Opus 1 that I can open up with all my instruments in it, panned to the right locations of the orchestra and capture the sequence to wav. In one shot...or if you think I need to capture sections one at a time to get a good sound...I think I can probably figure that out and merge the files back together in Sound Forge??? I assume I will need to know basic panning settings inside of Gigastudio for this part to work. Which I can't figure out with 2 sliders...am I losing quality by lowering the left side of a stereo sample???Also is EQ necessary at this point...and how do you EQ each section...I mean in basic, basic terms.
I know I read here somewhere to put all the like instruments on the same channels in different ports, so that DSP effects all the instruments in that section the same. I think you mean like all the flutes and pics on channels 1, 17, 33, and 49 of MIDI, right?
I then want to open it up in Sound Forge and apply Acoutic Mirror to the wav. Another thing I understand not one bit...the default in here is 100% wet, 0% dry. Is that how you properly use an impulse? Or are you supposed to use the dry mix like a regular reverb. What do you typically use, a few more db dry then wet? I have no clue. Someone said don't mess with editing a convolution impulse, or you defeat the purpose of recreating a room environment. Some people in here talked about setting a predelay of -40ms to -50ms...is that the response delay slider?
Do you normalize before or after you apply Acoustic Mirror?
Do you EQ any here with everything together, or do you do it all in DSP?
Or is it really necessary to record sections individually and EQ here, and merge them together?
That's probably all I can ask in my first post without getting kicked off. I feel confident asking all this though, because the best thing I have found about this product, is this forum. You guys seem to do whatever you can to help out customers and future customers. You guys actually care. If other companies cared as much, maybe I would be asking most of these questions on a Gigastudio users form, but I think we all know they're the polar opposite of this company.
Sorry for the long post and thanksin advance,
J
I do everything on 1 PC. A Pentium 4, 2.66Ghz with 1GB of RAM, an Audiophile 2496 and a Soundblaster Audigy. I use Finale to compose, and just started using Gigastudio instead of hardware units that I had used forever. (I never did much in the way of mixing and mastering before.) The only way I can really record well is with the capture to wave.
I tried to run the NFX reverb when recording, but it was lackluster in comparison to your demos, and put my CPU usage well above 50%. So I tried Sound Forge with Acoustic Mirror. Now I'm only using demo sounds, but I can still fake a composition to try it out using what notes I have in an instrument. Here's what I need desperate help with:
I like the Vienna results when you guys do your thing with reverb and panning on your demos and posts much better than anything else I've heard...seems much more flexible, but if I don't understand how to make a good demo CD with your product, then the EASTWEST recorded reverb and panning (if I understand it correctly) would be better for a newbie like me.
If you are going to use only gigastudio and capture to wave to record a dry wav. Open it in Sound Forge and do some normalizing and Acoustic Mirroring...I don't know how to EQ for realism,
what do I do in Gigastudio to get accurate panning? I understand why I pan and where I want instruments to come from sonic-wise, but I don't understand the best way to do it.
I've read on the forum "pan in DSP, not the MIDI mixer"
If I do that I have a left and a right slider...both without any numbers to guide me on how much I have actually panned" How do I know I am properly placing them in the field. I'm not seeing an angle here. What helps me create that sense of distance in instruments seated back farther..."collapse the stereo field" aren't those the sliders I'm messing with for panning...how do you narrow the field and pan with two sliders that have no numbers and are less then an inch long?
I hate to ask all these questions...but it seems this is child's play to most of the people here...and while the posts seem general to you...its still beyond me. And before I spend a grand on a great product, I want to have faith that I can make it sound at least newbie good. I realize that skill will come with practice, and that you guys didn't suddenly learn great mixing through osmosis, but if you could answer a few questions in dumby form for me, I would feel much more comfortable with my learning curve.
All I want to do is set-up a performance file after purchasing Opus 1 that I can open up with all my instruments in it, panned to the right locations of the orchestra and capture the sequence to wav. In one shot...or if you think I need to capture sections one at a time to get a good sound...I think I can probably figure that out and merge the files back together in Sound Forge??? I assume I will need to know basic panning settings inside of Gigastudio for this part to work. Which I can't figure out with 2 sliders...am I losing quality by lowering the left side of a stereo sample???Also is EQ necessary at this point...and how do you EQ each section...I mean in basic, basic terms.
I know I read here somewhere to put all the like instruments on the same channels in different ports, so that DSP effects all the instruments in that section the same. I think you mean like all the flutes and pics on channels 1, 17, 33, and 49 of MIDI, right?
I then want to open it up in Sound Forge and apply Acoutic Mirror to the wav. Another thing I understand not one bit...the default in here is 100% wet, 0% dry. Is that how you properly use an impulse? Or are you supposed to use the dry mix like a regular reverb. What do you typically use, a few more db dry then wet? I have no clue. Someone said don't mess with editing a convolution impulse, or you defeat the purpose of recreating a room environment. Some people in here talked about setting a predelay of -40ms to -50ms...is that the response delay slider?
Do you normalize before or after you apply Acoustic Mirror?
Do you EQ any here with everything together, or do you do it all in DSP?
Or is it really necessary to record sections individually and EQ here, and merge them together?
That's probably all I can ask in my first post without getting kicked off. I feel confident asking all this though, because the best thing I have found about this product, is this forum. You guys seem to do whatever you can to help out customers and future customers. You guys actually care. If other companies cared as much, maybe I would be asking most of these questions on a Gigastudio users form, but I think we all know they're the polar opposite of this company.
Sorry for the long post and thanksin advance,
J