Setup is a breeze, with a built-in help screen that detects your day and gives step-by-step instructions Using MIDI mode lets you control Stutter Edit 2 with a MIDI keyboard.Using Auto mode lets you trigger any gesture with one button, great for quickly auditioning gestures, or for when you need a little instant gratification in your mix.Whether you’re adding ear-candy to a mix or jamming live onstage, Stutter Edit 2 will fit seamlessly into your workflow. You can also use a MIDI keyboard to tell Stutter Edit 2 when to trigger, letting you “perform” your effects like an instrument. Now you can trigger gestures instantly with the new Auto mode, which lets you trigger your gestures with one button. I'm kind of surprised that the AU versions worked for you.Stutter Edit 2 is a “playable effect”-it must be “triggered” in order to do anything to your audio. I ran into this problem a while back trying to route MIDI out from a Reaktor ensemble to a VI, and in my research I came across the tidbit that some NI plugs would only route MIDI in VST format.
STUTTER EDIT VST MANUAL
The manual was probably written prior to the ability of DP to run VSTs. So all this is to say, if SE doesn't work as an AU, try it as a VST! But since it's behaving smoothly, I think I'll leave it. I'm inclined to keep it that way even though DP generally doesn't like two active formats for one plugin. So I now have SE activated as both an AU and VST version. That did it! Now DP is seeing SE as a MIDI destination. After I had tried about half a dozen things, I finally went back to preferences in DP and activated the VST version of SE. The plugin showed up ok, but I couldn't send MIDI to it. I tried Stutter Edit as an AU plugin since the SE manual says that's the only format that will work inside DP. But it is different in that, rather than narrowing down to one version/format, I actually activated a second format, and that's the one that works. It looks like it is similar to previous posters' problem, in that the correct format needed to be loaded. Tunefool wrote:This issue has now been solved for me. This is an excellent example of why! Flexibility and power to create anything! That's what DP is all about! People don't understand why we have separate MIDI tracks from our Instrument tracks - like it's a handicap. Try that on you orchestral template with 100s of Vis playing back and.crazy! Add a MIDI track and output it to Stutter Edit on the master fader. Again, hit play to hear the effect.ģ) Try putting Stutter Edit on you master bus or master fader channel. Or you could take a send out of the VI track to an audio track while your Vi track outputs to your an aux for processing, or to the Main Outs. You can record both your instrument performance, your Stutter Edit performance AND you can bus the Instrument track to an audio track and record an audio version of your performance. Send the other MIDI track to Stutter Edit with it's input from the other keyboard. Send one MIDI track to the Instrument track as normal choosing one keyboard as an input source. Insert a synth pad or drum loop VI on the Instrument track. Create two MIDI tracks and one Instrument track. Hit play to hear the effect.Ģ) Two MIDI tracks (need two keyboards for this one) and an Instrument Track - Go into multi record mode. Your MIDI track is pointing to Stutter Edit which is an insert on the aux track, which is the bus for the audio track. Insert Stutter Edit on the AUX track.Ĭonnect your MIDI track, like your connecting to an instrument track, Stutter Edit will appear in the MIDI output menu. Use the aux track as your audio track bus. There is more than one way to connect Stutter in DP, which is good because it does something unique and different depending on how you connect it.ġ) MIDI/Audio/Aux - Create a MIDI track, and audio track and an aux track. I've been using it lot for end of film credit music. There must be a way to remedy this, but exactly how escapes me. The problem is that in the long list of devices that my MIDI tracks output to, Stutter Edit is not among the ones that appear. To do that, the output of the MIDI track should be set to Stutter Edit. Remmet wrote:I recently got Stutter Edit, and apparently you control it with a MIDI track.