Steinberg Nuendo 5 Manual
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121 Fades, crossfades and envelopes Making Auto Fade settings for individual tracks By default, all audio tracks will use the settings you have made in the project’s Auto Fades dialog. However, since Auto Fades use computing power, a better approach may be to turn Auto Fades off globally and activate them for in - dividual tracks, as needed: 1.Right-click the track in the track list and select “Auto Fades Settings…” from the context menu (or select the track and click the “Auto Fades Settings” button in the In - spector). The Auto Fades dialog for the track opens. This is identical to the project’s Auto Fades dialog, with the addition of a “Use Project Settings” option. 2.Deactivate the “Use Project Settings” option. Any settings you now make are applied to the track only. 3.Set up the Auto Fades as desired and close the dialog. Reverting to project settings If you want a track with individual Auto Fade settings to use the global Auto Fade settings, open the Auto Fades dialog for the track and activate the “Use Project Settings” checkbox. Event envelopes An envelope is a volume curve for an audio event. It is sim- ilar to the realtime fades, but allows you to create volume changes within the event, not only at the start or end. To create an envelope for an audio event, proceed as fol- lows: 1.Zoom in on the event so that you can view its wave- form properly. 2.Select the Pencil tool. When you move the Pencil tool over an audio event, a small volume curve symbol is shown next to the tool. 3.To add an envelope point, click in the event with the Pencil tool. An envelope curve and a curve point appear. 4.Drag the curve point to adjust the envelope shape. The waveform image reflects the volume curve. •You can add as many curve points as you like. •To remove a curve point from the envelope, click on it and drag it outside the event. •The envelope curve is a part of the audio event – it will follow when you move or copy the event. After copying an event with an envelope, you can make independent ad- justments to the envelopes in the original event and the copy. ÖIt is also possible to apply an envelope to the audio clip using the Envelope function on the Process submenu of the Audio menu (see “Envelope” on page 266). •To remove an event envelope curve from a selected event, open the Audio menu and select the Remove Volume Curve option.
123 The arranger track Introduction The arranger track allows you to work with sections of your project in a non-linear fashion, to simplify arranging to the maximum extent. Instead of moving, copying and past - ing events in the Project window to create a linear project, you can define how different sections are to be played back, like a playlist. For this, you can define arranger events, order them in a list, and add repeats as desired. This offers a different and more pattern-oriented way of working, which complements the usual linear editing methods in the Project window. You can create several arranger chains, making it possible to store different versions of a song within the project without sacrificing the original version. When you have created an arranger chain that you like, you have the op - tion of “flattening” the list, which creates a normal linear project based on the arranger chain. You can also use the arranger track for live performances on the stage, in clubs or at parties. Setting up the arranger track Let’s say you have prepared a number of audio files that form the base of a typical pop song, with introduction, verse, chorus and bridge. Now you want to arrange these files. The first step is to create an arranger track. On the ar- ranger track, you define specific sections of the project by creating arranger events. These can be of any length, may overlap and are not bound to the start or end of existing events and parts. Proceed as follows: 1.Open the project for which you want to create ar- ranger events. 2.Open the Project menu and select Arranger from the Add Track submenu (or right-click the track list and select the corresponding option from the context menu). An arranger track is added. There can be only one arranger track in a project, but you can set up more than one arranger chain for this track, see “Managing arranger chains” on page 125. 3.On the Project window toolbar, make sure that Snap is activated and that the Snap Type is set to a mode that allows your arranger events to snap to appropriate posi - tions in the project. Snap to events is activated, i. e. when drawing in the Project window, new events will snap to existing events. 4.On the arranger track, use the Pencil tool to draw an event of the desired length. An arranger event is added, called “A” by default. Any following events will be named in alphabetical order. •You can rename an arranger event by selecting it and changing its name in the Project window info line or by holding down [Alt]/[Option], double-clicking on the name in the arranger chain (see below) and entering a new name. You may want to name your arranger events according to the structure of your project, e. g. Verse, Chorus, etc. 5.Create as many events as you need for your project. When arranger events have been created, the music sequence is determined by the arranger events. Events can be moved, resized and deleted using the stan- dard techniques. Please note: •If you want to change the length of an event, select the Arrow tool and click and drag the lower corners of the event in the desired direction. •If you copy an arranger event (by [Alt]/[Option]-drag- ging or by using copy/paste), a new event will be created with the same name as the original. However, this new event will be totally independent from the original event. •Double-clicking on an arranger event adds it to the cur- rent arranger chain.
124 The arranger track Working with arranger events You now have a number of arranger events that form the basic building blocks for your arrangement. The next step is to arrange these events using the functions of the Ar - ranger Editor. Creating an arranger chain You can set up an arranger chain in the Arranger Editor or in the Inspector for the arranger track. The Arranger Editor is opened by clicking the “e” button in the Inspector or in the track list. On the right in the Arranger Editor, the available arranger events are listed, in the order they appear on the time line. To the left you find the actual arranger chain, which shows in which order the events will be played back, from top to bottom, and how many times they are repeated. Initially the arranger chain is empty – you set it up by add- ing events from the list to the chain. There are several ways to add events to the arranger chain: •By double-clicking on the name of an event in the win- dow section on the right (or in the Project window). When an event is selected in the arranger chain on the left, this will add the event above the selected event. When no events are selected in the arranger chain, the event will be added at the end of the list. •By selecting one or more events in the list, right-clicking and selecting “Append Selected In Arranger Chain”. This will add the selected events at the end of the list. •By dragging and dropping arranger events from the list on the right to the arranger chain on the left. A blue insertion line shows you where the dragged event will end up. An event is dragged into the arranger chain. •By dragging arranger events from the Project window into the arranger chain. If you followed our example, you should now have arranger events arranged in a very basic pop song pattern. How - ever, we have used audio files that are only a few bars long – to turn our pattern into a “song” (or at least into a basic sketch of the song structure), these files must be looped. This is where the Repeats function comes in. If you want an event to repeat several times, proceed as follows: •Click in the Repeats field for an event, type in the de- sired number of repeats and press [Enter]. When playing back the arranger chain, the Counter column indicates which repeat of this event is currently playing. •Click in the Mode field for an event and select the de- sired repeat mode. Click the “e” button… …to open the Arranger Editor. OptionButtonDescription NormalIn this mode, the arranger chain will be played back as you set it up. Repeat foreverIn this mode, the current arranger event will be re-peated in a loop until you either click on another event in the Arranger Editor or press play once again. Pause af-ter Re-peats In this mode, the playback of the arranger chain will be stopped after having played back all repeats of the current arranger event.
125 The arranger track When you now play back the arranger chain, you will hear the complete arrangement. Proceed as follows: 1.Make sure that Arranger mode is activated. In Arranger mode the project will be played back using the arranger set- tings. 2.Position the Arranger Editor window so that you can see the arranger track in the Project window, and click in the arrow column for the event at the top of the list. You will see the project cursor jump to the beginning of the first event specified in the arranger chain. 3.Activate playback, either from the Arranger Editor or on the Transport panel. The events are played back in the specified order. Editing the arranger chain In the arranger chain on the left, you can do the following: •Select multiple events by [Ctrl]/[Command]-clicking or [Shift]-clicking as usual. •Drag events to move them in the list. •Drag events holding [Alt]/[Option] to create copies of the selected items. The insert location for both move and copy operations is indicated by a colored insertion line. A blue line indicates that the move or copy is pos - sible; a red line indicates that moving or copying events to the current position is not allowed. •Use the Repeats column to specify how many times each event is to be repeated. •Click the arrow to the left of an event in the arranger chain to move the playback position to the start of that event. •To remove an event from the list, right-click on it and se- lect “Remove Touched” from the context menu. To remove several events, select them, right-click and select “Remove Selected”. Navigating To navigate between arranger events, you use the ar- ranger transport buttons: These controls are available in the Arranger Editor, on the Project window toolbar, and on the Transport panel. In the Arranger Editor, the event that is currently played back is indicated by an arrow in the leftmost column, and the indicators in the Counter column. Managing arranger chains You can create several arranger chains. This way, you can create alternative versions for playback. In the Arranger Editor, the toolbar buttons on the right are used for this: •In the Inspector, these functions are accessed from the Arranger pop-up menu (opened by clicking on the Ar - ranger name field). The arranger chains you create will be listed on the Name pop-up menu, found in the Arranger Editor to the left of the buttons, at the top of the arranger track Inspector, and in the track list. Please note that to be able to select an - other arranger chain from the pop-up menu, the Arranger mode must be activated. ButtonDescription Click this to rename the current arranger chain. Creates a new, empty arranger chain. Creates a duplicate of the current arranger chain, containing the same events. Removes the currently selected arranger chain. Only avail-able if you have created more than one arranger chain. First repeat of current chain step Previous chain step Next chain step Last repeat of current chain step
126 The arranger track Flattening the arranger chain When you have found an arranger chain that suits your purposes, you can “flatten” it, i. e. convert the list into a lin- ear project. Proceed as follows: 1.Click the Flatten button (or select Flatten Chain from the pop-up menu in the Inspector for the arranger track). The events and parts in the project are reordered, repeated, resized, moved and/or deleted (if these are not within the boundaries of any used arranger event), so that they correspond exactly to the arranger chain. The Flatten button 2.Activate Playback. The project will now play back exactly as in Arranger mode, but you can view it and work with it as usual. Flattening options Sometimes it might be useful to keep the original arranger events even after flattening the arranger track. By using flattening options you can define which chain is flattened, where it is stored and how it is named together with other options. 1.Click the Flattening options button. 2.In the window that opens, select the desired options. In the Source section you can specify which arranger chains are flattened. The available options are: The Destination section allows you to choose where the result of the flattening is saved. The available options are: In the Options section you can make further settings. The available options are: !Flattening the arranger chain may remove events and parts from the project. Only use the Flatten function when you know you do not want to edit the arranger track/chain any more. If in doubt, save a copy of the project before flattening the arranger chain. OptionDescription Current ChainIf you activate this option, only the current chain will be flattened. Checked Chains…If you activate this option, you can select the arranger chains you want to flatten in the list to the left. All ChainsIf you activate this option, all arranger chains of the current project will be flattened. OptionDescription Current ProjectThis is only available if you have selected “Current Chain” as Source. If you activate this option, the result of the flattening of the current chain will be saved in the current project. New ProjectIf you activate this option, you can flatten one or several chains in a new project. In this case it might be useful to use naming options. If you activate “Append Chain Name”, the Chain Names will be appended in brackets to the project name. If you activate “Use Chain Name”, the new projects will have the name of the current arranger chains. If you acti -vate “Add Number”, the new projects will be named like the old ones and a number will be appended in brackets. OptionDescription Keep Arranger TrackIf you activate this option, the arranger track will be kept when flattening the arranger chain. Activate “Rename Arranger Events” to append a number to the events, ac -cording to their use. For example, if you use arranger event “A” two times, the first occurrence will be renamed “A 1” and the second “A 2”. Make Real Event CopiesNormally, you will get shared copies when flattening the arranger track. If you activate this option, real copies will be created instead. Don’t Split EventsIf this option is activated, MIDI notes that start before or are longer than the arranger event will not be included. Only MIDI notes that begin and end inside the arranger event boundaries will be taken into account. Open New ProjectsIf you activate this option, a new project will be created for every flattened arranger chain. If you activate the “Cascade New Projects” option the opened projects will be cascaded.
127 The arranger track 3.You can now flatten the arranger track by clicking the Flatten button. If you realize that you want to do further arrangements, you can click the “Go Back” button and make your adjustments. Your Flattening settings will be kept. 4.Click the “Go Back” button to go back to the Arranger Editor or close the window by clicking its Close button. Live mode If you have set up an arranger track and play it back, you have also the possibility to influence the playback order “live”. Note that the Arranger mode has to be activated to be able to use the Live mode. 1.Set up an arranger chain in the Inspector or in the Ar- ranger Editor for an arranger track, activate the Arranger mode and play back your project. Now you can use your arranger events listed in the lower section of the Inspector to play back your project in Live mode. 2.Switch into Live mode by clicking on the little arrow in the lower list of the Inspector to the left of the arranger event you want to trigger. The arranger event will be looped endlessly, until you click on another ar- ranger event. This might be useful, for example, if you want to loop a gui-tar solo with a flexible length. In the Jump Mode pop-up menu, you can define how long the active arranger event will be played, before jumping to the next one. The following options are available: •You can stop Live mode by clicking the Stop button or go back to “normal” playback in Arranger mode by clicking on any arranger event in the upper list. In the latter case, playback will be continued from the arranger event where you clicked. Arranging your music to video The relative time of your arranger track can be taken as a reference instead of the project time. This is useful, if you want to use the arranger track to compose music for video and fill a specific video section with music, by repeating the corresponding number of arranger events. If you position your external sync master device to a posi- tion that does not match the Project Start time, Nuendo will jump automatically to the right position in the arranger track and will start playback from there, i. e. the correct rel- ative position and not the absolute project time will be found. The reference for the external timecode can be MIDI or any other timecode that can be interpreted/read by Nuendo. OptionDescription NoneJumps to the next section immediately. 4 bars, 2 barsWhen one of these modes is selected, a grid of 4 or 2 bars (de-pending on the setting) will be placed on the active arranger event. Whenever the respective grid line is reached, playback will jump to the next arranger event. An example: Let’s say you have an arranger event which is 8 bars long and the grid is set to 4 bars. When the cursor is anywhere within the first 4 bars of the arranger event when you hit the next arranger event, playback will jump to the next event when the end of the fourth bar of the arranger event is reached. When the cursor is anywhere within the last 4 bars of the arranger event, playback will jump to the next event at the end of the event. When an event is shorter than 4 (or 2) bars and this mode is se-lected, playback will jump to the next section at the event end. 1 barJumps to the next section at the next bar line. 1 beatJumps to the next section at the next beat. EndPlays the current section to the end, then jumps to the next sec-tion.
128 The arranger track An example: 1.Set up a project with a MIDI track and three MIDI parts. The first part should start at position 00:00:00:00 and end at position 00:01:00:00, the second should start at position 00:01:00:00 and end at position 00:02:00:00 and the third should start at position 00:02:00:00 and end at position 00:03:00:00. 2.Activate the Sync button on the Transport panel. 3.Add an arranger track and create arranger events that match the MIDI parts. 4.Set up the arranger chain “A-A-B-B-C-C”, activate the Arranger mode and play back your project. 5.Start external timecode at position 00:00:10:00 (within the range of “A”). In your project, the position 00:00:10:00 will be located and you will hear “A” playing. Nothing special! Now, let’s see what happens if your external sync master device starts at a position that does not match the Project Start time: 6.Start at 00:01:10:00 (within the range of what origi- nally was “B”). In your project, the position 00:01:10:00 will be located and you will hear “A” playing, because it plays twice in the arranger track. 7.Start external timecode at position 00:02:10:00 (within the range of what originally was “C”). In your project, the position 00:02:10:00 will be located and you will hear “B” playing, because it plays “later” in the arranger track. ÖIf the Arranger mode is not activated or no arranger track exists, Nuendo will work as usual.
130 The transpose functions Introduction Nuendo offers transpose functions for audio, MIDI and in- strument parts and for audio events. These allow you to create variations of your music or change the harmonics of an entire project or separate sections. Transpose can be applied on three levels: •To the entire project By changing the project Root Key in the Project window toolbar, the whole project will be transposed (see “Transposing an entire project with the root key” on page 130). •To sections of the project By creating transpose events on the transpose track, you can set trans- pose values for separate sections of your project (see “Transposing sep-arate sections of a project using transpose events” on page 132). •To individual parts or events By selecting individual parts or events and changing their transpose value in the info line, you can transpose individual parts or events (see “Trans- posing individual parts or events using the info line” on page 133). Apart from the transpose features described in this chapter, you can also transpose all MIDI notes on the selected track using the MIDI modifiers (see “Transpose” on page 374), selected notes using the Transpose dialog (see “Trans- pose” on page 396), and MIDI tracks using MIDI effects (see the separate PDF document “Plug-in Reference”). Transposing your music In the following sections we will describe the different possibilities of transposing your music. Note that these can also be combined. However, we recommend you to set the root key first, before recording or changing trans - pose values on the transpose track. Transposing an entire project with the root key The root key you specify for a project will be the reference that audio or MIDI events in your project will follow. You can however exclude separate parts or events from being transposed, e. g. drums or percussion (see “The Global Transpose setting” on page 133). Depending on whether you are using events which already contain root key information or not, the procedures differ slightly. If the events already contain root key information Let’s say you want to create a project based on loops. Proceed as follows: 1.Open the MediaBay and drag some loops into an empty project, see “Inserting the files into the project” on page 341. For this example, import audio loops with different root keys. 2.Open the Root Key pop-up menu in the Project win- dow toolbar and set the project root key. If the Root Key pop-up menu is not visible, right-click the toolbar and se- lect the “Project Root Key” option from the context menu. By default, no project root key is specified (“-”). !The transpose functions do not change the actual MIDI notes or the audio, but only affect the playback. !As a general rule, always set the root key first when you work with content with a defined root key.