Recording and Editing Notes

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Revision as of 13:45, 9 February 2010 by imported>Taktik (→‎Entering Notes Step By Step)
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Recording / Editing Notes

In Renoise you've got two ways to record notes:

  • Live Recording: Record what "you are playing", while playing back the song. This is how most sequencers record notes.
  • Step By Step: Enter and edit notes manually with the computer keyboard or a MIDI keyboard, step by step, either while the song is playing or stopped.

Edit Mode

First, to be able to record anything, make sure the edit mode is enabled. To do so, press the ESC key on your keyboard, or click the record button in the transport controls:

The red border around the pattern editor indicates now that the pattern editor is in record mode.


Live Recording

To record "what you play":

All notes will now be recorded into the the current track, pattern and playback position in the Pattern Editor.

Tips: To enable record mode and start playing with one shortcut, you can also use the "RIGHT SHIFT" key on your keyboard. To only start playing, you can either use the SPACE bar on your keyboard, the RIGHT ALT key to start looping the current pattern, or RIGHT CONTROL key to start playing the song.

Entering Notes Step By Step

To record notes "step by step" manually when stopped:

  • Simply play notes with the edit mode enabled

To record notes "step by step" while playback:

So Pattern Follow switches between the Live Recoding and step mode. Use the Edit Step controls in the pattern editors to set up how many lines you want to jump per note:

File:Vvoois renoise editstep.png Edit Step Controls

Tips: To quickly switch pattern follow ON and OFF; you can use the "SCROLL LOCK" key on your keyboard. To quickly change the edit stop amounts, you can use the keyboard shortcuts CONTROL + 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0.

Realtime and Manual Quantization

When Live playing notes, Renoise will by default record notes with the highest possible precision. This is done by using the Note Delay column in the Pattern Editor. The note delay column allows you to delay specific notes in the else fixed pattern line grid by with a precision of a 256th line. If you don't want to precisely record your notes, you can let Renoise quantize them either in real-time or do this after you've recorded them. This is done with the quantize controls in the Pattern Editors control bar:

File:Vvoois renoise pattern editor quantize.png

The Q button en or disables live quantization. The number next to it specifies the quantization amount in lines. Press the button next to the number to manually quantize a rnge in the pattern after recording. There are also some useful shortcuts listed.

Polyphonic vs. Monophonic Recording

The chord mode button in the Pattern Editors transport bar allows you to toggle recording chords vs. sequential (File:Vvoois renoise pc keyjazz active.png).

Sequential (monophonic) recording can often be better when recording drums or when recording or monophonic instruments.

Entering Chords with the Computer Keyboard

When entering notes step by step with the computer keyboard, Renoise will by default place all notes sequentially. If you want to quickly insert chords without live recording, you can do this by holding down the LEFT SHIFT KEY while entering the notes. This will automatically switch and create new columns and place the hold down notes to a chord. MIDI keyboards will always record chords when pressing more than one note at once.