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Melodyne DNA question

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Bill Washburn

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Nov 24, 2009, 11:27:13 PM11/24/09
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I just downloaded the Melodyne DNA program and tried it out. I am truly
amazed at what it seems able to do! However, I do have one question: - is
there any way to adjust the amplitude threshold so more notes show up? I
can see and manipulate 75% of them, but I can't edit some as they aren't
showing up.

Thanks,
Bill

yrret

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Nov 25, 2009, 1:42:09 AM11/25/09
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"Bill Washburn" <washburn...@hotmail.net> wrote in message
news:heibn3$cja$1...@news.eternal-september.org...

One of its limitations is anything of the same pitch can't be seperated. Is
that what your refering to?


Bill Washburn

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Nov 25, 2009, 6:55:44 AM11/25/09
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"yrret" <b...@ahell.com> wrote in message news:Q74Pm.84$Lq...@newsfe20.iad...

No, I'm wondering if it's possible to adjust the gain range of the notes
displayed so I can either see (and work with) more or less notes. For
example, if the threshold was set at -50 dB, many more notes will be present
than at a threshold of 10 dB. I'm thinking that there should be some way to
adjust this, but I haven't come across it yet.

Bill

Ty Ford

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Nov 25, 2009, 7:25:39 AM11/25/09
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On Wed, 25 Nov 2009 06:55:44 -0500, Bill Washburn wrote
(in article <hej604$kq5$1...@news.eternal-september.org>):

Yes, there is an orange slider at the top of the window that does that and
the venetian blinds do it from top to bottom, if that's what you want.

Regards,

Ty Ford

--Audio Equipment Reviews Audio Production Services
Acting and Voiceover Demos http://www.tyford.com
Guitar player?:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWaPRHMGhGA

Bill Washburn

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Nov 25, 2009, 9:01:10 AM11/25/09
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"Ty Ford" <tyre...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:0001HW.C7328C73...@News.Individual.NET...

Yes, I found that in the manual, thanks. Looks like I'll have to print it
out. I've never had much success reading on-line PDFs and prefer a hard
copy instead.

Overall, I'm quite impressed with what this program can do. It's the first
one I've come across that can actually edit a specific instrument within the
mix and catch most, if not all, of the harmonics- a true breakthrough IMO.
I also have Algorithmix Renovator which can also edit/ remove instruments
but usually not catching all the important harmonics and the process is a
lot more tedious than with Melodyne.

The program truly shows promise for what I've been trying to do for years:
recreate a short orchestral passage without an orchestra and using only
convolution and sampled instrumentation. My problem, up to this point, has
always been inability to properly isolate each instrument due to the
fundamental/ harmonic issue but now I may be past that drawback. Melodyne
seems to "capture" the notes really well so when they are moved the correct
harmonics move along as well. Not perfect in all cases of course, but quite
a leap ahead of what I have used up until this point.

Bill

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