What do you guys think is the fastest and / or easiest way of making click tracks?
Tags
Comments
Recording a separate track from a metronome may give the best so
Recording a separate track from a metronome may give the best sounding click, but I don't regard the click sound as all that important.
Using the built in click in ProTools allows more flexibility for tempo changes, and allows for automated time signature changes.
I tend to write a midi track specificaly to use as a click or ry
I tend to write a midi track specificaly to use as a click or rythm track to suit each series of overdubs and the musican
I then comit to audio and bump a little during the level setting test records
keeping an eye on the timing of the overdub after it has landed
... before/ON/after beat stuff
by bumping the click/rythm about you can control how the overdub lands
it's subtle and depends on the musician and their overdub/click experience
try it
I like Kev's idea... I tend to do the same thing but instead use
I like Kev's idea... I tend to do the same thing but instead use different click sounds of varying "fatness" when needed, it's subtle and I can rely on musician feel instead of my sometimes flawed logic of how much I should bump the click manually. The perceived length of the the click sound sometimes makes all the difference in the world.
Well for me it's either use the ProTools click or I tend to use
Well for me it's either use the ProTools click or I tend to use my Tama RhythmWatch and just record it to a separate track (because I personally dislike the tones of the ProTools click, and sometimes I need plenty of click volume to record my drums anyway).