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Pro tools shortcuts without number pad
Pro tools shortcuts without number pad





  1. #Pro tools shortcuts without number pad pro#
  2. #Pro tools shortcuts without number pad windows#

Likewise, by increasing the Region End Pad value, the space between the end of the audio and the region boundary can be adjusted so that the audio decays naturally. When I zoom into the last three regions, you can see how adjusting the Region Start Pad up to 358 milliseconds includes some silence at the start of the first and second regions, and more importantly, leaves intact a breath at the start of the third. Using the Region Start and End Pad controls, you can adjust the amount of silence that is kept intact either side of the wanted audio. Reducing the threshold by 2dB to -38dB resolves this problem.Īdjusting the Region Start Pad values allows me to avoid unnatural chopping at the start of each region. Changing the settings will produce different results: in our example, if the Threshold is increased from -44dB to -36dB, the first and last regions are divided in two, which is what I want in this situation, but the tail of the middle one is cut short. In the example case, three regions will be created. The Strip Silence window will open, defaulting to the settings you last used, and borders will appear on the selected regions to show which sections will be stripped out if Strip Silence is applied with these settings.īringing the Strip Threshold back down to -38dB gets the balance right.

#Pro tools shortcuts without number pad windows#

Open the Strip Silence window from the Windows menu or use the shortcut Command+U (Mac) or Ctrl+U (Windows). In the example shown in the screenshots, I'm using a solo vocal track. To start with, you must select a region or regions that you want to use Strip Silence on. Let's run through a typical example of using Strip Silence. increasing the Threshold value to -36dB causes more areas to be detected as silence, including some wanted audio. In addition, the Rename button allows you to rename the new regions, add suffixes and renumber them too. The Minimum Strip Duration control will determine the shortest amount of silence that is deemed to be worth removing, while Region Start Pad and Region End Pad allow you to put some space at the start and end of the new regions so that there is no risk of clipped starts or truncated decays. The Strip Threshold control determines how quiet a piece of audio has to be before Strip Silence will consider it to be 'silence'. The Strip Silence window has four slider controls on it. Other uses for Strip Silence include cutting up vocals or dialogue. Simply put, Strip Silence enables you to cut out all the gaps in an audio region, and do it non-destructively too! It is great, for example, for carving up drum tracks, allowing you to set them up onto the grid so that when you change the tempo in Ticks mode, all the hits stay in their correct places.

#Pro tools shortcuts without number pad pro#

I'll kick off this month's Pro Tools workshop by looking at Strip Silence, a sometimes overlooked feature that can be used to tidy up all sorts of material in a semi-automated fashion.

pro tools shortcuts without number pad

The Strip Silence window in Pro Tools allows you to automate complex edits that would take hours to do by hand.

pro tools shortcuts without number pad pro tools shortcuts without number pad

Here, the default settings divide my vocal region into three. Using the Strip Silence feature in Pro Tools to 'clean up' a vocal take.







Pro tools shortcuts without number pad