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Table Of Contents
27
Recording
Recording Instrument Parts
4. Click the Record button to start recording.
5. Record 4 bars.
6. Press [Space].
7. Deactivate “Record Ready” so that you do not hear the input any more.
Congratulations! You have just recorded your first instrument part in Sequel.
8. Load the project “MIDI Playback” found in the “Sequel Tutorial 1” folder.
9. Set the project cursor to bar 1 and press [Space] to listen back.
Recording Multiple Takes of an Instrument Part
Basically, recording multiple takes of an instrument part is the same as multi-take
audio recording, but there is one important difference. When it comes to MIDI multi-
take recording, you can choose between two recording methods:
You can select the recording method from the MIDI Recording pop-up menu on the
Settings Page in the Multi Zone.
Recording
method
Description
Take This is the default mode where all recorded MIDI takes are stacked
in the cycle region. As with audio takes, you can select the take that
you like most or assemble a perfect take, see
“Recording Multiple
Takes of your Audio” on page 25. This is useful if you want to record
different versions of an instrument part, for example a piano
performance.
Mixed In this mode, all notes that you record during the cycles are recorded
into the same instrument part. This is useful for drum recordings, for
example. You can record the kick drum in the first cycle, the snare in
the second cycle, and so on.