![]() ![]() I’m going to try the “CNTRL + TAB” thing that was mentioned earlier to see if that fixes it. This occurs even when I drag a MIDI loop directly into the active instrument lane. When dragging loops from AD2 into CB it mutes the current AD2 instrument track and creates a new AD2 instrument track. Now is a good time to upgrade too, everything is running at 50% off at XLN Audio until the 29th.īut with that said, there is one annoyance I have not been able to figure out. wav versions of the MIDi loops, ways to transform a MIDI loop before bringing it into your DAW, and a few new Flex cells to add extra kit pieces for layering. They added a lot of great functionality including dragging. You may want to look at your CB preferences (VSTi and MIDI sections) to see if there is something active that’s causing this behavior.Īs a side note, I will say that upgrading to AD2 is well worth it. If I could at least reduce the latency substantially enough from the drum kit to the computer via the straight forward audio connection, I guess I could listen to the backing track on external speakers, listen to the drum kit via it’s headphone connection, and sync both tracks in Audacity once recorded.I currently use AD2 in CB8.5 on a Windows workstation, but I do not recall having this problem when I used the older version of AD. Am I going to need an external device in this loop to meld everything together? If I then complete the “loop” by also connecting the headphone out of the notebook to the Mix In connection of drum module, I get echoing and multiple sound effects, not a single clean sound.īottom line, all I want to do is open Audacity, import a backing track in MP3 format, connect the Roland TD-1KV kit to the notebook, play the drums and add in an accompanying drum track to that MP3 track, and monitor all while I am recording, in real time, with as little latency as possible. ![]() If I connect the drum module via headphone out to sound card input on notebook, open Audacity, I do get a response when striking drum pads, but the latency is unacceptable, have tried to alter the latency preferences somewhat, but to no good result. I have connected via USB through Reaper and Addictive Drums 2 to setup MIDI sounds external to Audacity for recording, however, that has opened a slew of issues not relative to this forum. Thanks for the quick response…I completely understand the MIDI/USB vs the Headphone output difference. ![]() The MIDI beats can be quickly dragged and dropped right in. Have recorded multiple guitar/vocal tracks with no problem via USB connected POD Line 6 HD500X, headphones connected to the POD, Audacity on desktop computer, perfectly with no lag or delay.Īpparently, others have been successful doing this, need some assistance. If youve marked certain ones as favorites, you can find them again by clicking the FAV BEATS icon. If I connect headphone to the output of drum module, then, of course, there is no latency, however, then I can’t hear the backing (.mp3) track loaded as track 1 in Audacity to be able to accompany it and record a drum track on track 2. It runs standalone or as a plug-in in your music production software. Have changed some of the latency settings via edit/preferences, but never could get drum pad hits to be without delay of some kind. Addictive Drums 2 is the ultimate drum production studio. When connect the headphone out on the drum module to the mic input of the notebook…records the signal appropriately, however, there is so much latency, I can’t listen to the live recording session via the headphone out of the notebook. Audacity 2.1.2, Windows 8.1 notebook, Roland TK-1KV drum kit, when connect USB (MIDI) output to computer, sets up as a TK(1) device in device manager, but Audacity doesn’t recognize as an input (microphone) device, can’t record my V-Drums via USB directly to Audacity. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |