Operation Manual
Table Of Contents
- Table of Contents
- The Sequencer
- Routing Audio and CV
- Routing MIDI to Reason
- Using Reason as a ReWire Slave
- MIDI and Keyboard Remote Control
- Synchronization
- Optimizing Performance
- Transport Panel
- Reason Hardware Interface
- The Mixer
- Redrum
- Subtractor Synthesizer
- Malström Synthesizer
- NN-19 Sampler
- NN-XT Sampler
- Introduction
- Panel Overview
- Loading Complete Patches and REX Files
- Using the Main Panel
- Overview of the Remote Editor panel
- About Samples and Zones
- Selections and Edit Focus
- Adjusting Parameters
- Managing Zones and Samples
- Working with Grouping
- Working with Key Ranges
- Setting Root Notes and Tuning
- Using Automap
- Layered, Crossfaded and Velocity Switched Sounds
- Using Alternate
- Sample Parameters
- Group Parameters
- Synth parameters
- Connections
- Dr. Rex Loop Player
- Matrix Pattern Sequencer
- ReBirth Input Machine
- The Effect Devices
- Menu and Dialog Reference
- About Audio on Computers
- MIDI Implementation
- Index
About Audio on Computers
251
Reason’s built in sequencer is not affected by latency!
When Reason’s sequencer is playing back a song, the timing between notes is
perfect! Once playback of a Reason pattern or song is up and running, latency
isn’t a consideration at all. The computer clocks the audio between the steps
and does this with perfect quartz accuracy! The timing is immaculate!
ReWire and Latency
When you run Reason as a ReWire slave, it is the other program, the Rewire
master that is responsible for actually creating the audio and playing it back via
the audio card. This means that it is the master program’s latency you will get as
a final result.
! When Reason runs as a ReWire slave, what audio card you have,
what driver you use, and settings you have made in the Preferences
dialog are of no importance at all! All audio card settings are then
instead done in the ReWire master application!
For information on ReWire, see “Using Reason as a ReWire Slave”.
Reducing latency
✪ Please note that internal audio under Mac OS 9 has a fixed latency
of 11ms which is very stable under all normal circumstances. The
tips below are for Windows users and for Mac OS 9 users with addi-
tional audio cards.
There are a few general methods for making sure latency is as low as possible:
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Use a card with an ASIO driver.
While this in itself is no guarantee for low latency, ASIO drivers generally
perform better than MME or DirectX.
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Select an audio card that supports low latency (small buffers) and
which is known for well written ASIO drivers.
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Remove background tasks on your computer.
This might be any background utility you have installed as well as network-
ing, background internet activities etc.
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Optimize your songs.
You might run into situations where you have to raise the Output Latency
setting to be able to play back a very demanding song on your computer.
Another option would be to actually optimize the song. See “Optimizing Per-
formance” for details.
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Get a faster computer.
This is related to the point above and only required if you find that you need
to increase Output Latency because your computer can’t really cope with
the songs you try to play.