5.0

Table Of Contents
110
Automation
There are two approaches you can use to create automa-
tion curves:
“Offline”, by manually drawing the curves on automation
tracks in the Project window.
See “Editing automation events” on page 115.
“Online”, by enabling the Write button and adjusting
parameters in the mixer or channel settings window while
rolling through the project in realtime. The value settings are
recorded and displayed as a curve on the automation track.
In the following sections, this online writing of automation data is also re-
ferred to as an “automation pass”.
The methods are not different in terms of how the auto-
mation data is applied. They only differ in the way the au-
tomation events are created – manually drawing them or
recording them during automation passes. Any applied
automation data will be reflected in both the mixer (a fader
will move for example) and in a corresponding automation
track curve.
There are no hard and fast rules regarding which method
you should use. For example, you can create your automa-
tion data online without ever even opening an automation
track. Or you can stick to drawing automation curves off-
line. Every method has its advantages, but of course it is
up to you to decide what to use and when.
Editing curves on automation tracks offers a graphical
overview in relation to the track contents and the time
position.
This makes it easy to quickly change parameter values at specific points,
without having to activate playback. For example, this method gives you a
good overview if you have a voice-over or a dialog on one track and a
music bed on another track, the level of which needs to be lowered by a
specific amount every time the dialog occurs.
By using write automation in the mixer you do not have
to manually select parameters from the Add Parameter list.
You can work much like you would using a “real” physical mixer. Every
action you perform is automatically recorded on automation tracks which
you can later open for viewing and editing.
The automation tracks themselves indicate the writing of
automation data:
While writing automation data, the color of the automa-
tion track in the Track list changes to red.
The delta indicator in the automation track shows the
relative amount by which the new parameter setting devi-
ates from any previously automated value.
This is an additional visual aid when writing new automation data.
What can be automated?
You can automate virtually every parameter in the Cubase
AI mixer.
To find out which parameters can be automated for a
particular track, click in the Parameter display of the auto-
mation track to open a pop-up menu. Select “More…” to
open the Add Parameter dialog.
This dialog lists all automatable parameters for a particular track type. It is
described in detail in the section “Assigning a parameter to an automa-
tion track” on page 112.
Options and Settings
About the Automation Reduction Level preference
This item can be found on the Editing page in the Prefer-
ences dialog. The automation reduction function automati-
cally reduces the number of automation events. During an
automation pass (or when drawing automation with the
Pencil tool), these are added as a continuous stream of
densely packed break-points. This is necessary because
the program cannot “guess” what you will be doing next.
The delta indicator