Hello, I’ve been demoing app2 and really love what it does. I was curious about how it works in cubase 13. when phase aligning dynamically, does rendering a track in place apply the changing phase adjustments? It would make sense that a static setting would have no issue, but how about a constantly changing (dynamic) one ? I don’t want to use the make extension permanent feature because I’m working on a long session and want to print the changes as I go but keep the processing on as I work down the timeline. When rendering in place does each track need to keep referencing the ref track, because I would seem that the processing is done track by track and wouldn’t be “listening” to the ref track as each one was rendering, in a side chain sort of sense. Or are the dynamic phase changes “remembered” for each track as you render each one individually? Is audio suite in protools the only way that you can print the tracks with dynamic phase changes? forgive me if I’m not understanding how it works. I’m still trying to determine the best workflow for cubase… thank you!
Hi @westonpiano,
Auto-Align Post requires ARA exactly for that reason. (ARA - Audio Random Access).
There shouldn’t be any difference in AAP2 processing when making extension permanent or bouncing in place.
The “dynamic” adjustments are calculated during the alignment process. Any rendering is done based on the state during alignment.
Meaning, if you do any changes such as moving regions or content on the reference track(s) after aligning, they won’t be considered (though you should see an exclamation mark on regions that have outdated analysis)
So, as long as you don’t change the relations between your reference and aligned content. Even after printing it. You should benefit from aligned phase coherent tracks.
Let us know if you have further questions and as always, feel free contacting our support.
amazing, thank you! My demo is expiring today and I"m definitely picking up this amazing software. It makes sense what you’re saying, thank you for clarifying !