Unable to silence volume on imported audio
Unable to silence volume on imported audio
Hi all.
I mixed an Aura project and sent it to Logic, where I recorded a simple B3 pad. I exported that single track (in stereo) as a .wav and imported it into Auria.
But I am unable to completely silence it, even with the fader all the way down. It's really weird.
Any thoughts?
I mixed an Aura project and sent it to Logic, where I recorded a simple B3 pad. I exported that single track (in stereo) as a .wav and imported it into Auria.
But I am unable to completely silence it, even with the fader all the way down. It's really weird.
Any thoughts?
Re: Unable to silence volume on imported audio
Weird! I can't even *mute* it. And if I solo it, nothing at all plays.
Re: Unable to silence volume on imported audio
Aw hell. Nevermind. the damned thing imported into my click track for some stupid reason!
Re: Unable to silence volume on imported audio
GRR!! And now I can't get the original click/drum track back for some reason! Any help?
Re: Unable to silence volume on imported audio
OK Nevermind.
What a pain.
So lessons learned: importing tracks is destructive.
What a pain.
So lessons learned: importing tracks is destructive.
Re: Unable to silence volume on imported audio
Actually, importing audio into Auria is not destructive. If you accidentally imported into the wrong track, just tap and hold on the region and move it to another track. Let me know if I can help in any way.
Rim
Rim
Re: Unable to silence volume on imported audio
This was, *somehow* destructive. Luckily, it just imported over a click/drum loop, so all I had to do was re-create the loop. But I was a little panicked there for a minute!
Re: Unable to silence volume on imported audio
Don't forget about the 'Undo' button Similarly, taking periodic snapshots can provide a convenient "get out of jail card".
When you import audio, be careful to specify which track to import to (or '+' to create a new track during import and import to that track). As Rim said, importing audio is not destructive. However, you can accidentally import over existing audio regions, thereby silencing the overlaid audio. The original audio is still there; it's just not visible/audible.
EDIT: Of course, if you're convinced this is a bug and you can recreate the symptom at will, please give precise step-by-step instructions of how to make it happen
When you import audio, be careful to specify which track to import to (or '+' to create a new track during import and import to that track). As Rim said, importing audio is not destructive. However, you can accidentally import over existing audio regions, thereby silencing the overlaid audio. The original audio is still there; it's just not visible/audible.
EDIT: Of course, if you're convinced this is a bug and you can recreate the symptom at will, please give precise step-by-step instructions of how to make it happen
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