Steinberg Nuendo 3 Operation Manual
Have a look at the manual Steinberg Nuendo 3 Operation Manual online for free. It’s possible to download the document as PDF or print. UserManuals.tech offer 523 Steinberg manuals and user’s guides for free. Share the user manual or guide on Facebook, Twitter or Google+.
NUENDO Working with hitpoints and slices 19 – 471 Using the Close Gaps function If you have sliced a loop for tempo changes, lowering the tempo be- low the loop’s original tempo will create gaps between the slices. The lower the tempo is in relation to the original tempo, the wider the gaps will be. This can be fixed using the “Close Gaps” function on the Ad- vanced submenu on the Audio menu: 1.Set the desired tempo. 2.Select the part in the Project window. 3.Select “Close Gaps” from the Advanced submenu. Now time stretch is applied on each slice to close the gaps. Depending on the length of the part, this can take a little while. 4.The waveform is redrawn and the gaps are now closed! •Note that this feature creates new clips in the Pool, one for each slice. •Close Gaps can also be used when the project tempo is higher than the original loop tempo. This will use the time stretch function to shrink the slices to fit. •If you decide to change the tempo again after using the Close Gaps function, you should undo the Close Gaps operation or start over again, using the original unstretched file. •You can also use this function on individual events (in the Audio Part Editor or Project window). The events don’t have to be slices – you can use Close Gaps simply to stretch an au- dio event to the start position of the next event.
NUENDO 20 – 474 The Pool Background What is the Pool? Every time you record on an audio track, a file is created on your hard disk. A reference to this file – a clip – is also added to the Pool. Two general rules apply to the Pool: •All clips, audio or video, that belong to a project are listed in the Pool. •There is a separate Pool for every project. The way the Pool displays folders and their contents is similar to the way the Mac OS X Finder and the Windows Explorer display folders and lists of files. What can you do in the Pool? In the Pool you can, amongst other things, perform the following oper- ations: Operations that affect files on disk • Import clips (audio files can automatically be copied and/or converted). • Convert file formats. • Rename clips (this will also rename the referred files on disk), and Regions. • Delete clips (if you select the “Move to Trash” option and empty the Trash folder – see page 484). • Prepare File Archives for backup. • Minimize Files. Operations that only affect clips • Copy clips. • Audition clips. • Organize clips. • Apply audio processing to clips. • Save or import complete Pool files.
NUENDO The Pool 20 – 475 Opening the Pool You open the Pool in any of the following ways: • By clicking the Pool icon in the Project window. • By selecting “Pool” on the Project menu or “Open Pool Window” on the Pool menu. • By using a key command (by default [Ctrl]/[Command]-[P]). The content of the Pool is divided into three main folders: •The Audio folder This contains all audio clips and regions currently in the project. •The Video folder This contains all video clips currently in the project. •The Trash folder Unused clips can be moved to the Trash folder for later permanent removal from the hard disk. These folders cannot be renamed or deleted from the Pool, but any number of subfolders can be added (see page 495).
NUENDO 20 – 476 The Pool Window Overview Toolbar overview Audio folder Trash folder Video folderAudio clip name Region name Waveform imageColumn HeadingsToolbar Open/Close all Folders View/Attributes Pop-up Hide/show info lineImport Button Project Folder Path Pool Record Folder Path Play and Loop buttons, audition volume controlSearch Button
NUENDO The Pool 20 – 477 The info line Click the “Show Info” button on the toolbar to show or hide the info line at the bottom of the Pool window. It shows the following information: How clips and regions are displayed in the Pool • Audio clips are represented by a waveform icon followed by the clip name. • Audio regions are represented by a region icon followed by the region name. • Video clips are represented by a camera icon followed by the clip name. Number of audio files in the Pool Number of files in the Pool that are not in the project folder (e.g. video files)Total size of all audio files in the Pool Number of audio files in use
NUENDO 20 – 478 The Pool The Pool window columns Various information about the clips and regions can be viewed in the Pool window columns. The columns contain the following information: Column Description Media This column contains the Audio, Video and Trash folders. If the folders are opened, the clip or region names are shown and can be edited. This column is always shown. Used This column displays the number of times a clip is used in the project. If a column row is empty, the corresponding clip is not used. Status This column displays various icons that relate to the current Pool and clip status. See page 479 for a description of the icons. Musical The checkbox in this column allows you to activate or deactivate Musical Mode. If the Tempo column (see below) displays “???”, you have to enter the correct tempo before you can activate Musical Mode. Tempo This shows the tempo of audio files for which a tempo has been set using the Audio Tempo Definition tool. If no tempo has been specified, the column displays “???”. Info This column shows the following information for audio clips: The sample rate, bit resolution, number of channels and the length in seconds. For re- gions, it displays start and end times in frames, and for video clips the frame rate, number of frames, and length in seconds. Type This column shows the file format of the clip. Date This column shows the date when the clip was created. Origin Time This column shows the original start position where a clip was recorded in the project. As this value can be used as a basis for the “Insert into Project” Pool menu item (and other functions), you can change it if the Origin Time value is redundant. This can either be done by editing the value in the col- umn, or by selecting the corresponding clip in the Pool, moving the project cursor to the new desired position and selecting “Update Origin” from the Pool menu. Image This column displays waveform images of audio clips or regions. Path This column shows the path to the location of a clip on the hard disk. Reel Name If you have imported an OMF file (see page 649), they may include this at- tribute, in which case it is shown in this column. The Reel Name describes the 'physical' reel or tape from which the media was originally captured. User At- tributesIf you have created User definable attributes for your project, they will each be displayed in their own column (see page 480).
NUENDO The Pool 20 – 479 About the Status column symbols The Status column can display various symbols that relate to the clips status. The following symbols can be shown: Symbol Description This indicates the current Pool Record folder (see page 494). This symbol is shown if a clip has been processed. The question mark indicates that a clip is referenced to the project but is missing from the Pool (see page 488). This indicates that the clip file is external, i.e. located outside the current Audio folder for the project. This indicates that the clip has been recorded in the currently open version of the project. This is useful for finding recently recorded clips quickly.
NUENDO 20 – 480 The Pool User Attributes You can define your own attributes for elements in the pool. Simply select the “Define User Attributes” from the View/Attributes pop-up and create as many new attributes as you need. Each attribute can be either a number, text or a simple check mark. You can use them to sort items in the pool or merely keep track of some aspect of your project. Setting up a talent name attribute to keep track of ADR takes. Sorting the Pool contents You can sort the clips in the Pool by name, date etc. This is done by clicking on the corresponding column heading. Clicking again on the same heading switches between ascending and descending sort order. The arrow indicates the sort column and sort order.