There is a down-side to Input I’ve found though if you have effects like delay, sometimes Input will cut off the sound once it gets really quiet, but it’s still actually playing! Therefore “On Input” may be a better approach. I tend to lean towards Input more because it stops recording after the sound is done playing. Set up your sound, click record on Edison, and finally hit your key to play the sound for Edison to record. You will see Edison wait to record, and not start automatically! This is important for sound design. It works like this: Select either one of the two options above, and click the record button. Now to record – After Edison is set up on the master channel as the last effect, you’ll want to select either “On Input” or “Input” – This selects a certain way to record your sound. So, if I put Edison last out of all the plugins (being the last plugin on the Master buss), I’ll capture the sound exactly as I’m hearing it. – If you have more than one plugin on a mixer insert). This is because audio flows in series through plugins (audio goes in one plugin, effects it, then that effected audio goes into another plugin, which is effected even more etc. So, tips to recording these cool sounds you’ve made inside FL Studio with Edison:ĭepending what I’m doing, I’ll usually open Edison on the master channel as the last effect. (Whether this be to stock up for a sound kit to sell, or just stash for my personal collection!) įor myself personally, when ever I create riser sounds in my beats, or if I make a hot drum loop, I’ll record it into Edison, save it into my personal sound folder (labeling the BPM if it’s a drum loop), and storing it for later. I say your own beat because this avoids copyright issues of taking other’s music to sample/chop. Whether this be recording a snippet of a beat you’ve created, or just saving the drum loop out of one of your tracks to chop up for another beat. If you want help organizing your personal production folder, definitely check the course: A Specific Music Production Folder.Ĭreating a folder for personal sounds is very important for creating your own sound as a producer. And if you’re a business kind of guy, create different folders to set up different products which you could eventually sell. Organize it in such a way where you can store kick drums, claps, and your snares all separately. If you haven’t created your own personal folder for your own created sounds yet, I’d do that right now. Sound-Design with IN + Out Knobs Create a Personal Sounds Folder
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