156
:
Auto Arming
You must arm tracks in order to record. To safeguard your data, there is no automatic arming of any
tracks.
If you want to record MIDI tracks without arming a track, choose
Options-Global
, and select the
General tab. Click the Allow MIDI Recording without an Armed Track checkbox.
This feature lets you start recording a new track simply by making it the current track and pressing R
or clicking the Record button in the toolbar. Auto-arming makes it possible to inadvertently record over
existing material in the current track, however.
Recording Music from a MIDI Instrument
Once you have set your tempo and metronome, and armed one or more tracks, you are ready to start
recording.
To Record MIDI
1.
Set the Now time to the point in the project where you want to start recording.
2.
Click ,
press
r
, or choose
Transport-Record
. If your metronome count-in is turned on, it will
play the count-in.
3.
Play or perform the material you want to record. As you record, SONAR displays a clip containing
the new material in the Clips pane (unless you’ve turned off this option on the General tab of the
Global Options dialog—
Options-Global
command).
4.
Click
, press the Spacebar, or choose
Transport-Stop
to stop recording.
To listen to the new material, set the Now time to the start of the clip and press the Spacebar or click
. If you’re not happy with the recording, use
Edit-Undo
or press Ctrl+Z to erase the new material.
When you stop recording, if you do not see a new clip in the Clips pane, you may have a problem with
MIDI input. See
Appendix A: Troubleshooting
for more information.
Recording Audio
Before you record audio, you should check your input levels. If the levels are too low, you may end up
with too much hiss and background noise in your recording. If the levels are too high, your recording
will be inaccurate or distorted. To check your audio levels, use the audio meters in the either the Track
view or Console view. To adjust the input levels, you must use your sound card’s software mixer
program (or the Windows XP mixer) or an external hardware mixer for certain sound cards.
The audio meters indicate the volume at which the audio will be recorded, in units called decibels (dB).
The meter values range from -INF (silent) to 0dB (maximum volume). You can change many options in
the way SONAR’s meters display data: see “Metering” on page 378. To maximize the dynamic range of
your recording, you want to set the levels as high as possible without clipping.
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