Tag Archive for 'Pro Tools'

Prosoniq announcements

Prosoniq have announced the end of download support for Windows products, and the planned release of sonicWORX Pro for 2011.  This is from their press release….

Prosoniq Announces End of Download Support for Windows Products

Karlsruhe, Germany, July 16th, 2010 — Prosoniq announces today that its Windows products will no longer be available for download to registered users starting January 1st, 2011. Prosoniq has discontinued development of its few Windows products in June 2009 and has announced to focus development effort entirely on its Mac product line, as well as on upcoming platforms and products. Registered Windows users are advised to download a copy of their product at their earliest convenience and/or crossgrade to the corresponding Mac version (where available).

sonicWORX Pro Scheduled for 2011

Karlsruhe, Germany, July 16th, 2010 — Prosoniq announces that the release of its sonicWORX Pro software has been scheduled for 2011. sonicWORX Pro is an extended version of Prosoniq’s novel sonicWORX Isolate software. Isolate is designed to allow extraction and suppression of instruments and voice within a mix and has been shipping as of May 2010. It has received great attention since its introduction at Musikmesse 2010 and is currently one of Prosoniq’s top selling products – a limited demo version is available from the web site.

sonicWORX Pro will contain more specialized tools and algorithms intended to be used for mastering and restoration in addition to the extraction and suppression capabilities of Isolate. An upgrade path from Isolate to Pro will be made available so there will be the opportunity for Isolate users to upgrade at a reduced rate as soon as the Pro version is shipping. Purchasing Isolate now and upgrading to Pro will even be cheaper than purchasing Pro when it comes out, Prosoniq says.

Removing Reverb in Pro Tools update

Following on from my experiences with finding a plug-in that helped to remove reverb from recorded material posted here. The thread was picked up on the Pro Tools User Group in Linked In. For those who are Linked in members you can view the thread here. For those you aren’t here are some of the comments. ‘Andy remembered seeing a De-reverb plug-in at NAB near the Neyrinck stand. ‘Carl posted…

I remember seeing that plugin at Nab or IBC. The guys were Japanese and were only sharing a stand with Paul I think!

Which of course takes us full circle as it was the NML RevCon–RR plug-in from tacsystem.com which I referred to in my post as being the expensive option. ‘Beto M’ posted…

I’ve tried SPL last night and it’s working fine to me.  I’m still running on demo mode but i’m thinking to buy it.  But the japanese….i don’t know….there weren’t much informations about the plugin and about them….

and later posted having tried the demo….

yes it really works fine

Jeff H posted…

I’ve used the SPL plugin. Doesn’t work perfectly on everything but you can’t beat it for the price.

and then ‘Ryan H’ posted this advice for achieving similar results using different techniques…

The new Waves WNS Noise Suppressor (which is a lot like the Cedar DNS) is great for getting rid of some reverb as is the Cedar. put all the frequency faders down all the way. then lift up the threshold til it sounds good. turn up the smoothing a bit as well. Another way but tedious is drawing the volume automation down in the spaces between words and syllables.

Update on jerky video problem

Following my posts on the problems with Canopus boxes and Pro Tools 8.0.3 here, here, here and here as well as the jerky video problems I have posted on and the video compendium I posted about here and here, there has been another interesting post on the Pro Tools 8.0.3 jerky video thread on the Digidesign User Conference. ‘DigiTech Supt’ has posted….

There are several fixes in 8.0.4 and 10.6.4, but at least one outstanding issue when playing video on a 2nd monitor that appears to be OS related, which we’re working with Apple to implement a fix.
Can anyone on 8.0.4 and 10.6.4 who is seeing jerky/stuttering playback when using a Mojo or Canopus device let us know the specifics of your configuration and the size/codec being used for the video?

Also ‘Anibal’ has posted….

using Canopus, DV and different sizes, very smooth playback but eventually crashing when opening sessions with video in firewire

BIAS Launches Sizzling Summer Specials

Bias have some interesting offers on through the summer until August 31st. Some of these are of interest to Pro Tools users like…

Buy SoundSoap Pro 2, Get Master Perfection Suite Free, or vice-versa ($599 US value):

Customers purchasing SoundSoap Pro 2 or Master Perfection Suite – both powerful audio plug-in suites for AU, RTAS/AS, and VST hosts on Mac and Windows – may receive the complementing product at no additional charge.

SoundSoap Pro 2 ($599 US SRP) is the critically acclaimed high-end edition of the company’s popular SoundSoap audio restoration software and features additional parameter controls while integrating four comprehensive restoration tools in a single plug-in – including adaptive noise reduction (ANR), a powerful broadband dynamic noise reduction technology added in version 2 and lacking in most competing solutions.

Master Perfection Suite ($599 US SRP) is a powerful collection of six plug-ins designed for mixing, mastering, and sound design including; Reveal (7-tool analysis suite), Sqweez-3 & -5 (linear-phase multi-band dynamics), Repli-Q (linear-phase spectral matching), PitchCraft (pitch correction/transposition), SuperFreq (4,6,8 & 10-band paragraphic EQ), and GateEx (gate with downward expander).

The combination of SoundSoap Pro and Master Perfection Suite at effectively 50% off represents an astonishing value for anyone interested in enhancing their audio production workflow.

Buy Any Single MPS Plug-in, Get One Free (up to $149 US value):

All six plug-ins from Master Perfection Suite are also available separately (prices from $59 to $149 SRP) – customers purchasing any one of them may receive an additional single Master Perfection Suite plug-in of equal or lesser value at no additional charge through this special promo for a limited time.

Availability and promo terms:

Qualifying customers must purchase, register, and activate new editions of select BIAS products (excluding academic editions, upgrades, and cross-grades) from July 10 through August 31, 2010 from authorized BIAS resellers or directly from BIAS. To receive the free complementing product (delivered via download only), a rebate request form (available from the BIAS web site) must be completed and returned to BIAS (via fax, email, or physical mail) along with a copy of the original purchase receipt.

This should be of interest to anyone who followed by posts here and here on EQ Matching as it is possible to buy Repli-Q on its own very cost effectively.

Digidesign announce Pro Tools LE and M Powered v8.0.4 updates

Here is the full details of all the v8.0.4 updates…
Pro Tools 8.0.4 Downloads & Details

June/July, 2010 — Avid is pleased to announce the availability of Pro Tools® 8.0.4, a free, downloadable update for Pro Tools 8.0-8.0.3 owners. This latest update offers many performance enhancements and fixes, including:

  • Automation
  • Editing
  • Avid Unity and Interplay Workflows
  • Recording
  • MIDI
  • Relinking and importing
  • Stability

For a select list of fixes in Pro Tools 8.0.4, please download the following PDF document:

Pro Tools 8.0.4 also adds Windows 7 support for Pro Tools LE® and Pro Tools M-Powered™ systems. We’ve also included new PC drivers for Pro Tools LE 8.0.4, greatly expanding the number of compatible laptop and desktop computers. On the Mac side, Pro Tools LE and M-Powered 8.0.4 adds support for the latest i5 and i7 iMac and MacBook Pro models.

For more information about Pro Tools 8.0.4, please see the following page in the Products / Pro Tools / What’s New section:

Summary of Updates

Pro Tools|HD® 8.0.4

  • Includes many performance enhancements and fixes

Pro Tools LE 8.0.4

  • Includes many performance enhancements and fixes
  • Full support for Windows 7 (32-bit and 64-bit)
  • Full support for i5 and i7 iMac and MacBook Pro models
  • Adds new Windows drivers—broadening compatibility on PC desktops and laptops

Pro Tools M-Powered 8.0.4

  • Includes many performance enhancements and fixes
  • Full support for Windows 7 (32-bit and 64-bit)
  • Full support for i5 and i7 iMac and MacBook Pro models

Compatibility Summary

Pro Tools 8.0.4 supports the same Pro Tools core systems as version 8.0.3, with the following operating systems:

  • Mac OS X 10.6.1 – 10.6.3 (Snow Leopard)
    • While 10.6.4 is not yet fully qualified with Pro Tools, our preliminary compatibility and performance testing has found no issues
  • Mac OS X 10.5.8 (Leopard)
  • Windows XP Service Pack 3 (Home or Professional, 32-bit)
  • Windows Vista Service Pack 2 (32-bit)
  • Windows 7 (32 and 64-bit)
    • Windows 7 is officially supported with Pro Tools LE and M-Powered version 8.0.4; and Pro Tools M-Powered Essential version 8.0.3
    • Pro Tools HD 8.0.4 can be used on Windows 7 as a public beta

Please Note:
Pro Tools 8.0.4 will be the last version of Pro Tools to support Macintosh Leopard (10.5.x), and Windows Vista operating systems. It will also be the last version of Pro Tools LE and M-Powered to support Windows XP.

Please read the EOSS (End of Software Support) Announcements for more information.

Not Compatible
Pro Tools 8.0.3 software and higher does not support some retired products:

  • Original Mbox
  • Expansion|HD Chassis
  • Macintosh PowerPC Computers

Please read the EOSS (End of Software Support) Announcements for more information.

Download Pages with Additional Details

Pro Tools HD 8.0.4 Updates — June 8, 2010

Pro Tools LE 8.0.4 Updates — July 7, 2010

Pro Tools M-Powered 8.0.4 Updates — July 7, 2010

Note: These updates are for the full version of Pro Tools M-Powered; Pro Tools M-Powered Essential remains at version 8.0.3.

Please Note: The Pro Tools 8.0.4 Updates are only available by download. You will need to use a broadband connection to download the update for your system. If you are not able to download on your Pro Tools system, you can download the update from any broadband connection, then transfer the update to your Pro Tools system.

Additional Downloads

Pro Tools 8.0.4 Optional software Downloads
Links to downloads and installation instructions for owners of optional software, plug-ins, toolkits, MP3 Option, DigiTranslator, MachineControl, and more:

iZotope Updates Required
For AudioSuite compatibility with Pro Tools 8.0.4, users of iZotope plug-ins should download the latest versions from the iZotope website:

Removing reverb in Pro Tools

Following on from my EQ matching experience here and here when I heard about a plug-in that might help just at the right time, I had a similar experience with some interview clips that had been recorded in a reverbant space.  Again I turned to the Digidesign User Conference for advice and found a relevant thread running on the Digidesign User Conference

The Solution

There were two main suggestions on this thread, one expensive and one cheap. The expensive one is the NML RevCon–RR plug-in from tacsystem.com  It is listed in their store at 123,900 Yen, which comes out at around £900, so I moved on to the other suggestion.

This was a plug-in not unsurprisingly called DVerb from SPL and is part of their MicroPlugs range (see fig 11). What’s more this plug-in won’t break the bank and there even a trial version anyway so you don’t have to risk anything!

Once downloaded there isn’t much to explain as to how to use it. There are only two controls, one controls the amount of reverb reduction and then other is to adjust the gain to compensate for any level changes.

Does this one work? The answer is again yes it does, I was able to get about 12 to 14 dB of reduction before it sounded odd. It came across as a multi-band expander and just as you can overdo it, when you use an expander, so you can overdo this little plug-in, but again as time is money.

Conclusion

This plug-in got me out of another little corner quickly and effectively and so I had another happy customer. I shelled out 59 Euros and bought the plug-in before the trial ran out so I can make more happy customers. Yes I could have used an expander, possibly the Waves C4 or the WaveArts multi-band dynamics plug-in and got a good result after some time messing about but as with the Repli-Q plug-in to have a simple plug-in that does the job quickly and well is invaluable.

Problem with Pro Tools session files not written to disk on last day of project

Had a scary problem earlier this week at BBC North with a Pro Tools system appearing not to write session files to the disk, either normal Saves or Save Session As or even Session File Backups.

Audio files, AudioSuite processed files and Fade Files all have been written to the drive so it doesn’t appear to be a permissions issue or a drive failing.

I did a search for all files created or modified yesterday and no session files came up, just the audio and fade files. It is as if Pro Tools was appearing to save but not actually writing the files to the disk.

I did a Deleted files scan of the drive with Data Resue 3, having taught it what ptf files look like, and found no recent copies of the session in question.

System is a G4 1.25 Mac Mini running Mac OS 10.4.x and Pro Tools 7.4LE with a 002R interface and all drives have Oxford Chipsets.

In researching the problem on the DUC I came across this post

We’re investigating this and see a few other web reports of this happening with other apps, so we’re looking at possible causes, including OS services that may play a part.
__________________
Avid Audio Tech Support

I have subsequently done a full deep scan with Data Rescue 3, and having taught it .ptf session files, it found over 1000 session files on the drive. I opened the 500 sessions that were larger than the latest session on the drive (300k) and although I found about 10 session files from the project in question, they all preceded the latest session on the drive.  This to me confirms that Pro Tools never wrote the files to the drive during that last day.

Having satisfied myself I couldn’t retrieve anything from the drive, I then ran a benchmark test on the drive, which is a Seagate 2.5″ Momentus IDE drive in a MacPower case with Oxford chipset. I benchmarked it to a recent Seagate SATA 2.5″ drive and it compared very well. Then I used the Integrity Test in Drive Genius II, set to write 16M files in random write for 30 minutes, and it proved to be very reliable. Finally I completed a full surface scan with Drive Genius II and it found no bad blocks so I believe the drive to be in A1 condition.

iZotope updates and fixes

IZotope have announced updates to their plug-ins which fix a problem there was with Pro Tools 8.0.4. David Could – Product Manager for Audio Post Production, has posted on this thread in the Digidesign User Conference….

Today iZotope have released updated versions of a number of their plug-ins (Alloy, Ozone 4, Trash, RX, Spectron and Vinyl) that address the issues encountered in Pro Tools 8.0.4. The updates can be downloaded from iZotope’s website. see below for direct links.

There are also updates for the other iZotope plug-ins

For AudioSuite compatibility with Pro Tools 8.0.4, users of iZotope plug-ins should download the latest versions from the iZotope website:

Finally iZotope have announced that the update to the RX restoration plug-in and application is more than a fix…

iZotope RX 1.3 Product Update
We’ve been working hard to update RX and just added these new features:

  • 64-bit Audio Unit support for native operation in 64-bit Logic Pro 9.1 and later.
  • New peak finding feature will automatically locate exact peaks in the Spectrum Analyzer faster and more effectively than manual zoom. Learn more about the Spectrum Analyzer.
  • New shortcut to choose time selection bounds in the RX application: simply listen and press the [ and ] keys during playback to set selection start and end points.
  • Many minor fixes and performance enhancements.

Download the update

All good news folks.

EQ Matching in Pro Tools part 2

In part 1 I explained the challenge and a potential solution. In this part lets see if the solution delivers…

Once fully installed, I inserted an instance of Repli-Q in the session to see how well it would work in this situation.

This is how I had laid out the session. I put the reference take on one track and then the muffled take on another track. This is so I could adjust the EQ on the muffled track but still hear the reference file untreated. When making comparisons like this, don’t listen to short snatches of the reference, followed by the region you are treating, as you can easily get fooled into thinking things are better when they are not. I always listen to the full reference region and then a good chunk of the region to be treated to make sure I was going in the right direction, yes it took longer but was well worth it in the end.

So with Repli-Q in the session, I bypassed the EQ plug-in on the ‘muffled’ track and moved the reference region down onto the muffled track so I could switch from one to the other with Bias’s plug-in.

Learn once

Next I opened up the Repli-Q plug-in, selected the reference region, hit Play and then Learn Spectrum in the Repli-Q window, and let it play for as long as possible through the reference region.

Bias recommend that you should always start playing before you hit the Learn button so that Repli-Q doesn’t try to learn digital silence and the same at the end, so I clicked the Learn Spectrum again before hitting the Stop button in Pro Tools. Now I had a green trace on the graph that represented the ‘reference’ files signature.

When I saved the profile by hitting the Save Spectrum button the trace turned to yellow.

Learn Twice

Now I highlighted the muffled region, hit Play again, hit Learn Spectrum and let Repli-Q learn the signature for the region I needed to treat. Whilst it was learning I got a green trace together with the yellow trace presenting the reference file.

Again hitting the Learn button stopped the learning process, and I remembered to leave it run a long time to get a good average for the ‘muffled’ region’s profile. Having clicked the Learn Spectrum again the plug-in displayed then three traces. The yellow trace represented the profile for the reference region, and then two traces for the ‘muffled region, a green trace for the input profile and a blue trace for the output profile. Now I could adjust the amount of EQ added to the muffled region with the Matching slider. I found that as I slid the Matching slider from its default 50% down to 0%, the plug-in had no effect on the treated audio, through to 100% where the output profile was identical to the input profile and so the maximum EQ change was applied to the muffled region.

Graph to EQ

I found it much easier at this point to see this in action by changing the display from Graph to EQ.

I could then see the EQ that Repli-Q was applying to the muffled region to get it to match the reference region.

Does it work I hear you ask? Well yes it does, it produced a much more natural treated region than I had achieved with an EQ plug-in alone. But having listened to the treated version carefully I noticed that there was an increase in low frequency background noise and it was still not quite bright enough for my taste. However with Repli-Q’s EQ curve pointing me in the right direction, and with the help of an EQ plug-in, in my case an instance of Waves Renaissance EQ 4, I applied a low frequency shelving to compensate for the increase in low frequencies shown above and also a fairly tight parametric boost centred around 7k to add to what Repli-Q was already doing.

With the two together I had a very close match and all done in about 10 minutes. All I needed to do was to render the treated files so they were the same length as the originals to make it as easy as possible for the video editor to replace the muffled regions with the treated ones. To do this, I copied the settings across from the real time plug-in to the corresponding AudioSuite version so I could process the files and then disable the real time plug-in to save computer processing power. Finally I send the processed file back to the client using the Sharing function on my Mobile Me iDisk.

Conclusion

The Repli-Q did a much better job, than I did, especially once I had helped Repli-Q along the way with a bit of extra targeted EQ and at around $149 for the single plug-in was well worth the money. Yes I could have persevered with EQ and matched it better but to have a simple to use tool that produced a very good result quickly is well worth it, after all time is money!



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