Audio Editor - Cubasis - 3.7

Cubasis Help

Product
Cubasis
Version
3.7
ft:locale
en-US
Document type
Webhelp
ft:openMode
fluidtopics

Double tap an audio event to open the audio editor.

Overview bar

The gray bottom panel shows the entire waveform of the audio file. The brightly marked section is displayed in the main window. Drag the left or right handle to zoom in / out and drag the section to adjust your view's position.

Ruler

The ruler at the top includes a playhead and two selection locators. Use these to adjust the selection within your audio event, which is marked blue. Depending on the your current time display setting (in the transport panel), the ruler will either display time in seconds or bars/beats.

Editing stretched / transposed audio

Since time-stretching works non-destructively, the audio editor will show and play back every audio event in its original time scale without any time-stretching or pitch shifting applied.

Play button

Sitting in the top left corner of the audio editor, the play button plays back the file that is currently being edited in the audio editor.

Tools

To the left, there is a list of tools available to manipulate your audio file:

Select

By default, the area between the two selection locators is always selected. Tap the Select option to select your whole audio editor view (the area between the top two markers). Any of the processing tools below apply to the selected area.

Trim

Erases all audio material around your selection.

Erase

Erases all selected material.

Reverse

Reverses the selected part of the audio event, which makes it sound backwards when played.

Normalize

Normalizing a file will change its general volume by setting the peaks to 100% without clipping. If a quiet waveform has no high peaks, normalizing it increases its overall gain (volume) until its highest levels have reached their maximum.

Fade

Fades your selection in or out.

Use the split tool (available in the general Tools menu) to precisely split an event with the audio editor playhead.

Save to Media

Saves the current audio event as a wave file in the MediaBay Audio directory. Use it to save changes in audio files, save new microphone recordings or make audio material available for use in other projects.

Saving to MediaBay writes the event's current tempo information into the resulting WAV file (iXML format).

Rename

Tap the event's name in the top left corner of the audio editor to bring up the rename dialog.

BPM button

On the right of the audio editor the audio file's tempo is displayed.

  • If the audio file has no embedded tempo information (iXML), it will show the project's current tempo. Tap the button and enter the audio file's original tempo.

  • Once the audio file has the correct information, you can sync it to the song's tempo with Time-stretch, using Auto mode. More detailed instructions here.

Stereo to mono conversion

If a stereo audio file is open, the Stereo button in the lower right corner can be tapped to convert it to a mono file.