@Suntower said:
Sorry for all the questions... I'm just trying to develop an efficient way to get the ideas into the computer faster. Right now, and this is no joke, if I -really- work on getting a line into the computer with all the expression I want, it's so slow I find myself losing my train of thought. So I usually end up just playing the raw notes and -then- going back later and adding all the expression---TEDIOUS!
Welcome to getting professional results. You are doing what most of all of us do here. Including the people who have the best sounding results you will ever dream imagineable. Lots of the best composers using this software, hand write every note and detail. It's why theirs sets apart from the beginner. I myself continue to strive for getting in as much in one pass as possible, but as you will find you have to draw the line somewhere and not let yourself go insane trying to setup a way to hit record, and sound like you are Mozart in one pass. Remove those expectations now, because they are unrealistic (and I mean that in a helpful way).
What you will find if you keep digging at it, is you will find a workflow that works great for you. But as most of us have found, it's not right out of the box. The most painful process is the unknowns of where to go, the efficiency can't be there when you don't understand it all. For me, between MIR Pro and my templates I can get instant gratification, however it is not still a completed sound (for my mom it is, for professionals, it's lacking). Things have to be tweaked and twisted (or re-recorded). I have only begun to be that good at it after much time with the software, much frustration and much overwhelmness.
Now I find myself getting near immediate workable results, but still have so much to learn about mixing and mastering. Because they definitely add the polish and luster to the tracks. I had to learn a long time ago, what I hand write in or record in real time is not what it will be like after I finish polishing it. But the real work comes AFTER I recorded my parts (changing keyswitches, massaging dynamics, program changes etc.) And this has absolutely nothing to do with musical ability, none. The only part where musical ability came in was in maybe helping you decide WHAT patch you would throw on that note. Even then, sometimes the absolute complete opposite patch you would have ever though of, was the best to use at that time. So logic doesn't always prevail.
As a rule of thumb for me incase this helps. A song that I record all the parts live I can be done in the same day. The timing is done, perfect. The general shaping is done, perfect. Now when I change the key switches, the new sample sounds better, but no longer does my dynamic XFade match anymore, so time to edit. One day of recording, 3-5 days of editing. Takes me about one week per song. Then I take a break from it because my ears are burned out of it. I come back to it a week later and tweak more. Then it's ready to be truly mixed and mastered by someone. If I learn to do those steps also, you can bet your butt it will add more time (Especially since I have no idea how to do some of it). Trained masters of those trades (mixing and mastering) can easily still take a full day with your one track, per phase.
Hope that helps. Get rid of the frustration mode, it doens't work. Relax, take a breath and don't expect immediate results or you are in for a world of hurting and disappointment. The pace at which you get to where you want is up to you, no one else. Stay focused on the goal, and after many failures you will one day realize my god, I have done it. What a great day that is.
Maestro2be