On 2004-10-21 18:16, cleanbluesky wrote:
Routing an entire project through SFP for recording and mastering is too F**King hard... Cubase SX is a wonderful time saver... Take for example (this is a medium-large proejct for me)
Drum Kit From Hell Superior
Gigastudio 3
Synths (Possibly)
4-5 channels of 96/24
VST effects including convolution reverb
While SFP is flexible, how would I include automation, MIDI playback and everything else by using SFP?
I don't mean to flame you or criticise your findings, in fact I think that it is admirable that you have used your time this way, isn't mastering through SFP a little too much like complication?
How is this different in SFP than Cubase? It's just a matter of shoving 16/32 ASIO channels into an SFP mixer and you're set. It takes, quite literally, no time at all if you have a default project setup. Then it's just a matter of using the STM mixer instead of the Logic/Cubase mixer. Not only that, but you can still use VST plugins/instruments in your sequencer's mixer (at least, works perfectly in Logic), and send their output to SFP for the final mixdown part (and added processing in SFP if that's what you want.)
You can still automate stuff in Cubase to your heart's content. Plugins, panning, and whatnot.
If you want to automate SFP stuff, I guess it's just a matter of setting a CC value on a SFP parameter, and in your sequencer for editing. Not much different from a VST param automation. This will also let you record "live" MIDI automation in SFP, and play it back without a problem (at least, been working really well for me.)
I guess I work a bit differently from most people tho. Logic has this thing called the Environnement, which is simply a MIDI modular system. It lets you create knobs, sliders, buttons, and whatnot, give them a MIDI note or CC number (or pitchbend, or whatever you like, even Logic function), and shove them off to any MIDI interface. I shove mine to SFP! This way I can control all the parameters I want in SFP without ever switching out of Logic. Also works with outboard gear, quite awesome for the obnoxious outboard FX unit with clunky interfaces (but full MIDI automation.) You can have this stuff sent to (or thru) the sequencer too, in case you want to record it.
I don't know if Cubase has similar stuff, but I'm sure it has something, knobs or whatnot, that will send out CC values. I heard rumors of some scripting on Sonar, so do-able on there too.
Once you are ready to master, you can use the mixer's insert slots, or just add your mastering plugins after the mixer output, or just record the mixer output and edit that in soundforge/wavelab/stuff, or run thru outboard devices, so send it to a mastering house on Pluto (them fungii sure know how to master stuff!)
I guess this might sound a bit complicated, but once it's setup, it's months and months and months of instant gratification. Setting up the SFP part, from scratch, takes almost no time (load mixer, load ASIO modules, load whatever else.) The MIDI aspect in Logic is a bit more voodoo-esque, but still quite do-able (and quite fun.) Once you know your way around, hacking an interface in Logic is QUITE fast, and you can hack standard interface in a matter of minutes. Automating it in SFP is just a matter of right-click-twist-knob-save-dialog. Getting a feedback on the sliders in Logic (ie move a slider in SFP, it moves in Logic!) is a step further in voodoo, but again quite do-able, just have to make sure you don't create feedback loops.
The other important detail is the ASIO latency, which isn't a problem if all your sources are coming from ASIO. If you add some SFP synths, you might want to delay them a bit to match ASIO latency within a milisecond or two. That's all.
Honestly, once you have the basic project setup (takes an hour maybe?), it's all ready to go each time you start your machine/software.
With a bit of experience in MIDI and audio in general, this isn't much more problematic than building a project in Cubase. And like I said, you can still automate all you want on the Cubase side. It's a pretty good idea to limit mix-tweaking (adjuting gain etc) to a single place, either the sequencer or SFP, but both ways will benefit from mixdown in SFP (try it!)
Anyway, I did a similar test with Logic/STM mixer when I had to decide where I would be mixing. Used a similar techniqe with 0 gain on all channels, and compared the 2 of them. Chose SFP, never looked back, this even if the mixing in Logic sure is more than enough to produce high quality recordings.