Book Image

The Ultimate Studio One Pro Book

By : Doruk Somunkiran
Book Image

The Ultimate Studio One Pro Book

By: Doruk Somunkiran

Overview of this book

The Ultimate Studio One Pro Book is a detailed, step-by-step guide to creating music with Studio One’s extensive set of production tools. This practical, goal-oriented resource will help musicians start producing their own music with Studio One and teach audio professionals how to include Studio One in their production workflow. The book begins by showing you how to set up Studio One to work smoothly on your system. The following chapters will walk you through the process of creating a project, along with recording audio and using virtual instruments to construct a MIDI arrangement. As you advance, you’ll find out how to edit your songs to perfection using Melodyne, Audio Bend, and an extensive collection of MIDI modifiers. You’ll also discover how to mix in Studio One with the effects plugins included in it, along with applying audio mastering in the Project window. Throughout this book, you’ll gain the skills needed to leverage Studio One confidently and effectively, as well as build your own unique music production workflow. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to effortlessly translate your musical ideas into complete songs using Studio One’s powerful tools.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
1
Part 1: Getting Started with Studio One
5
Part 2: Creating in Studio One
9
Part 3: Editing in Studio One
14
Part 4:Mixing and Mastering

Preparing a Song for the mix session

Let’s start by talking about the preparation steps you will need to take at the Song level. Following these steps will help your mixing sessions run smoothly.

Optimizing hardware and software for the mix

Mixing is a resource-intensive task for most computers, so before starting a session, it’s a good idea to give Studio One as much horsepower as your computer can provide. Use these techniques to optimize your system for a mix session:

  • The first thing you can do is increase Dropout Protection. We talked about Dropout Protection in Chapter 2, Installing and Configuring Your Studio One Environment, and so far, we had this set to Minimum because we wanted to minimize latency when recording audio or playing virtual instruments. Minimizing latency comes at a price, though: it forces your computer to perform its tasks within a very short period of time. This is fine for recording and editing tasks, which do not require too much...