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Steinberg Cubase Studio 4 Getting Started Studio Manual
Steinberg Cubase Studio 4 Getting Started Studio Manual
Here you can view all the pages of manual Steinberg Cubase Studio 4 Getting Started Studio Manual. The Steinberg manuals for Music Production System are available online for free. You can easily download all the documents as PDF.
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11 System requirements and installation The Syncrosoft License Control Center (which can be found in the Start/Programs menu under Windows or the Applications folder on a Mac) is the place where you can check the licenses installed on your Steinberg Key. If you are using other copy-protected Steinberg prod- ucts, you may want to transfer all licenses for your applica- tions to only one Steinberg Key, thus using only one USB port of your computer. To transfer licenses between keys, launch the...
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12 System requirements and installation Installing Cubasew The installation procedure puts all files in the right places, automatically. Windows 1.Double-click the file called “Cubase4.msi” or “CubaseStudio4.msi”. 2.Follow the instructions on screen. Macintosh 1.Double-click the file called “Cubase4.mpkg” or “Cu- base Studio 4.mpkg”. 2.Follow the instructions on screen. About the tutorials The program DVD also contains several tutorial project files and videos. These are not installed during the...
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14 Setting up your system Setting up audio Connecting audio Exactly how to set up your system depends on many dif- ferent factors, e. g. the kind of project you wish to create, the external equipment you want to use, the computer hardware available to you, etc. Therefore, the following sections can only serve as examples. How you connect your equipment, i. e. whether you use digital or analog connections, also depends on your indi- vidual setup. Stereo input and output – the simplest connection If...
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15 Setting up your system Connecting for surround sound (Cubase only) If you plan to mix for surround sound, you can connect the audio outputs to a multi-channel power amplifier, driving a set of surround channels. A surround sound playback configuration. Cubase supports surround formats with up to 6 speaker channels. The figure above shows a 5.1 surround setup. Recording from a CD player Most computers come with a CD-ROM drive that can also be used as a regular CD player. In some cases the CD...
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16 Setting up your system Selecting a driver and making audio settings in Cubase The first thing you need to do is select the correct driver in Cubase to make sure that the program can communicate with the audio hardware: 1.Launch Cubase, select Device Setup from the Devices menu and click on VST Audio System in the Devices list to the left. The VST Audio System page in the Device Setup dialog. 2.Select your audio hardware driver from the ASIO Driver menu. There may be several options here that all...
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17 Setting up your system If you are using audio hardware with a DirectX driver (Windows only) Cubase comes with a driver called ASIO DirectX Full Du- plex, available for selection on the ASIO Driver pop-up menu (VST Audio System page). ÖTo be able to take full advantage of DirectX Full Du- plex, the audio hardware must support WDM (Windows Driver Model) in combination with DirectX version 8.1 or higher. In all other cases, the audio inputs will be emulated by DirectX (see the dialog help for the...
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18 Setting up your system About monitoring In Cubase, monitoring means listening to the input signal while preparing to record or while recording. There are three ways to monitor: External monitoring External monitoring (listening to the input signal before it goes into Cubase) requires an external mixer for mixing the audio playback with the input signal. This can be a classic mixing desk or a mixer application for your audio hardware, if this has a mode in which the input audio is sent back out...
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19 Setting up your system You might want to use even more instruments for playback. If you do, simply connect MIDI Thru on the sound module to MIDI In on the next instrument, and so on. In this hook-up, you will always play the first keyboard when recording. But you can still use all your devices for providing sounds on playback. Setting MIDI Thru and Local On/Off In the “MIDI” section in the Preferences dialog (located on the File menu under Windows and on the Cubase menu under Mac OS X), you...
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20 Setting up your system Setting up MIDI ports in Cubase The Device Setup dialog lets you set up your MIDI system in the following ways: ÖNote: When you change MIDI port settings in the De- vice Setup dialog, these are automatically applied in the program. Showing or hiding MIDI Ports The MIDI ports are listed in the Device Setup dialog on the MIDI Port Setup page. By clicking in the “Visible” column for a MIDI input or output, you can specify whether or not it should be listed on the MIDI pop-up...