Because it makes your sound bad when you change the pitch of it. Also because you want to make diplo style vocals.

Well that's not true, it can make it sound better in some cases such as when you have the pitch specific modulations that only sound good on a certain noteGodzen wrote:Resampling - Why?
Because it makes your sound bad when you change the pitch of it.
good point, I do this pretty much every time I resample and I suggest everyone does it too. It sucks when that situation actually happens when you want to go back to a patch that you've deleted.FatScout wrote:Another benefit(? ... YMMV on this point) is that it forces you to "move on." While one might say "but I want to stay in MIDI for maximum control!", ultimately, some (well, I do but then again, you may not) tend to get stuck. By bouncing to .WAV, you basically force yourself to go forward with the actual production of your track. Again, some will probably disagree with me on this, but frankly if you really need to go back to MIDI, save another project with just the elements that will be resampled before you go-ahead and bounce.
If you rightclick->freeze you can then rightclick->flatten and it will create a straight up new audio track over your previous track, really useful for the mixing stage.Xince wrote:I didn't read all the posts here but I have a really simple technique. (for ableton live)
1. Insert MIDI notes to the instrument that you want to resample.
2. Freeze the track by right clicking and clicking on the "freeze track" option.
3. Create a new audio track.
4. CTRL drag the frozen midi block to the audio track.
This is the method I find easiest and best
o rly. will have to try this.Tekk wrote:If you rightclick->freeze you can then rightclick->flatten and it will create a straight up new audio track over your previous track, really useful for the mixing stage.
Or click the disc icon at the bottom of a mixer channel and select the two top options in the mixer dropdown menuKRONIKAL wrote:With the edison resample stuff is one of the simpliest things ever only press the rec button and choose the option on play( it means he start record once you press play) or in input ( start record when you reproduce any sound) and then drag and drop the .wav
Resampling is also very usefull for creating some particular sounds or i use it for ex for the back reverb...
Basiccaly everything you can normally do only with audio sample (stretch,chop,rearrange)now you can do it with a sound recorded from a synth
This is awesome! Didn't know about this!Xince wrote:I didn't read all the posts here but I have a really simple technique. (for ableton live)
1. Insert MIDI notes to the instrument that you want to resample.
2. Freeze the track by right clicking and clicking on the "freeze track" option.
3. Create a new audio track.
4. CTRL drag the frozen midi block to the audio track.
This is the method I find easiest and best
^ Also great but I find myself saving a frozen copy JUST in case I want to do some more midi editing.Tekk wrote:If you rightclick->freeze you can then rightclick->flatten and it will create a straight up new audio track over your previous track, really useful for the mixing stage.
Well... I'm glad I taught someone something ^^GangstaFish wrote:This is awesome! Didn't know about this!Xince wrote:I didn't read all the posts here but I have a really simple technique. (for ableton live)
1. Insert MIDI notes to the instrument that you want to resample.
2. Freeze the track by right clicking and clicking on the "freeze track" option.
3. Create a new audio track.
4. CTRL drag the frozen midi block to the audio track.
This is the method I find easiest and best
^ Also great but I find myself saving a frozen copy JUST in case I want to do some more midi editing.Tekk wrote:If you rightclick->freeze you can then rightclick->flatten and it will create a straight up new audio track over your previous track, really useful for the mixing stage.
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