
automation studio b r cracked
as i was going through his blog (and others), i found myself drawn to the posts by craig anderton, because they had little to do with music production and were more theoretical. my experience isnt that wide, but i also find myself drawing similar conclusions about the music industry, and things we might want to do with the technology we have now. so, ive decided to start a blog, and write about this. in this blog, i will share my thoughts about what we might do with our studio technology. in time, if i learn something that i think is useful, i will share that too.
if you view your daws browser, it should show all of your wav files and the main track list. right click on the file and select read track. this will bring up a second window. if you have effects in the channel fx channels and the bus, they will be applied to your wav file. if they arent, and they do sound good with your guitar, its a good idea to just leave them in there. also, if you have effects in the song bus, you dont want to try to run it on the wav file. it will leave a corrupting mark on the file. i like to leave all of my song buss effects in, but turn them off before exporting the wav file. you can see what kind of effects are currently activated in the song bus by going into the song bus settings and selecting song bus. if you have any channel fx channels enabled, their settings are also saved with the wav file. you can also do this with the instrument tracks, if you want to. if you have some sort of automation on your insert fader, then it will be heard in the wav file.