Hey I heard something pretty cool in a song.. The whole beat slowed down very gradually until all of the sounds were just murmuring and faded out. . Is there an effect that does this? I think I remember seeing a Waves effect like this but Im' not sure. . Would this be a time/pitch thing in Pro Tools? I've tried it out a few times but can't quite get it exactly. . Thanks ..
Comments
or download the pitch'n'time demo here: http://www.serato.com/p
or download the pitch'n'time demo here:
http://www.serato.com/products/pnt/download/
it work for 30 days
put it in varispeed mode.......
I don't think you can really do what this guy is talking about b
I don't think you can really do what this guy is talking about by conducting the music differently. :roll:
I was requested to do something like this only backwards for a metal album I did. It started with the end of a piece of music, and was played backwards starting extremely slowly (just digital murmurs at first) and increasingly sped up until it reached rediculous speed, and then cut to the next song. What I did was play the song through Cubase SX2, using the jog dial to mess with the speed; and play out of one set of soundcard outputs (RME) into a set of different soundcard inputs (SBAudigy), and record those inputs through a different recording program (Cakewalk). That way I could mess with things as much as I want in Cubase and record the results in Cakewalk. Odd I know, but it worked quite well. Don't know if you can find a way to do this with Protools, but maybe it will give you some ideas.
There's an example of something like this at the end of a work b
There's an example of something like this at the end of a work by Emerson Lake & Palmer on their debut LP from 1969/1970. (yes, that's an LP, not a CD! It's from the early days of "Prog Rock". ;-)
The work was based on a piece by Janacek, they called it "Knife Edge". At the end (the final 20 seconds or so), the piece slows down in tempo and pitch, and literally crawls to a halt finally. It was done with varispeed on an analog tape deck.
If you've got a half track with that capability, then dub it over there and have a go at it. Otherwise, you'll have to try it out in software, hopefully something with a variable, draw-able curve. Elastic Audio comes to mind - Samplitude & Sequoia will do this with a simple pencil-draw tool. I'm sure there are others out there as well. From what you're describing, you can do try it with tempo alone, or pitch alone, or both.
Boltino wrote: OR MAYBE THE BAND COULD DO JUST A TEENY BIT OF TH
Boltino wrote:
OR MAYBE THE BAND COULD DO JUST A TEENY BIT OF THINKING AHEAD AND LEARN TO DO A RETARD AND A DIMINUENDO AND STOP TRYING TO DO EVERY FUCKING THING IN THE WORLD WITH A CHRISTLESS PLUGIN!First, Calm Down
Second, its Ritardando or "Ritard" for short.
Wes
I think I made one of those Freudian things.
Thanks Reggie, thanks Eights, thanks Tim I'm gonna experiment wi
Thanks Reggie, thanks Eights, thanks Tim I'm gonna experiment with all that stuff (the hands on approach later when I get my hands ona tape desk lol). I'm gonna try that as well with Cubase.. If I find out what the producer used I'll post that in this thread as well.. It's subtle but really cool
If I was to do that I would record the track I wanted a ordinary
If I was to do that I would record the track I wanted a ordinary cassette tape. (Risking terrible quality of course.)
Then wire a variable capacitor to the tape motor instead of the fixed capacitor already present. (This adjusts the speed of the motor.)
I would playback the tape into my desk onto my computer and slow down the tape motor with the variable capacitor.
(Then run noisgates and EQ's to fix the 'tape damage.)
This would be excellent as a novelty but realisticly it would ruin the quality of the slowed down sound and I don't know if people could be bothered with such a hands on approach when I'm sure there is a plugin or something that could do this.
Either way...
tim...