Quick start – Waves Plug-in for Vocals and Monophonic User Manual

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Quick Start

I

NSERTING

T

HE

P

LUG

-I

N

To get started, insert Tune onto your vocal track (or monophonic instrument track.) It is

important that Tune precedes any effects processing on the source. We recommend that

Tune is your first insert on the track.

Important note to ProTools users!

For proper operation of Tune you need to first insert the Waves ReWire plug-in into your

session. Since the Waves ReWire plug-in has no audio output you should insert it into an

auxiliary track so that it doesn’t use a valuable voice.

Other host applications automatically launch the Waves ReWire device.

ReWire technology is made by Propellerhead software.

Once inserted on a track, Tune is ready to scan an incoming signal. To keep memory

usage reasonable and to offer you an extremely stable work environment, Tune can track

pitches for a duration of ten consecutive minutes. If you need to scan more than ten

minutes, you can clear the memory and use the Session Start Time dialogue to start a new

scan at a later specific location.

Tune fully syncs with the host editor’s time line, so that you will not have to leave the

plug-in during your session. The following transport functions can be performed from

within Tune:

1. Play start time.

2. Mark and playback loop regions.

3. Stop playback.

4. Start playback.

5. Set session start time.

6. Snap marker to host’s grid option.

All this is done using ReWire technology licensed from Propellerhead Software.

Before you begin scanning your track, you can set global parameters and segmentation

parameters such as Scale and Root. These can be modified later, but the modifications will

affect only the selected notes. Reference Pitch should be adjusted before the scan, as any

changes made after the scan will require clearing the graph and re-scanning.

S

CANNING AND

P

ITCH

T

RACKING

When you send audio through the plug-in, Tune will perform a scan and create the

following displays:

• Waveform overview - displayed at the top.
• Detected pitch curve - displayed in orange on the piano roll pitch editing graph.
• Correction pitch curve - displayed in green on the piano roll pitch editing graph.
• Note segments – displayed as light white blocks around segments of the pitch

correction curve.

An orange highlight on the top waveform overview indicates that Tune is scanning audio.

During the scan, you will not hear any changes in the original audio.

There’s no need to scan the entire track at once. Whenever Tune detects signal in a

section where it hasn’t yet established a pitch curve or where the pitch curve has been

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