<scripttype=text/javascript>varbaseurl="https://prokoudine.github.io/ardour-tutorial/en"</script><scripttype=text/javascriptsrc=/ardour-tutorial/js/search.js?1649613348></script></div><sectionid=homelinks><ul><li><aclass=paddinghref=/ardour-tutorial/en/><iclass="fas fa-home"></i> Home</a></li></ul></section><divclass=highlightable><ulclass=topics><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/title=Introductionclass=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/><b>1. </b>Introduction</a><ul><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/conventions/title=Conventionsclass=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/conventions/>Conventions</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/what-is-digital-audio/title="What is digital audio?"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/introduction/what-is-digital-audio/>What is digital audio?</a></li></ul></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/title="Getting started"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/><b>2. </b>Getting started</a><ul><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/starting-ardour-on-ubuntu/title="Starting Ardour"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/starting-ardour-on-ubuntu/>Starting Ardour</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/title="Overview of the Interface"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/>Overview of the Interface</a><ul><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/editor-window/title="Editor window"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/editor-window/>Editor window</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/mixer-window/title="Mixer window"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/mixer-window/>Mixer window</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/recorder-window/title="Recorder window"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/recorder-window/>Recorder window</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/cue-window/title="Cue window"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/overview-of-the-interface/cue-window/>Cue window</a></li></ul></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/creating-tracks-and-busses/title="Creating tracks and busses"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/creating-tracks-and-busses/>Creating tracks and busses</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/importing-audio/title="Importing audio"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/importing-audio/>Importing audio</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/setting-up-the-timeline/title="Setting up the timeline"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/getting-started/setting-up-the-timeline/>Setting up the timeline</a></li></ul></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/recording-audio/title=Recordingclass=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/recording-audio/><b>3. </b>Recording</a><ul><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/recording-audio/recording-audio/title="Recording audio"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/recording-audio/recording-audio/>Recording audio</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/recording-audio/understanding-routing/title="Understanding routing"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/recording-audio/understanding-routing/>Understanding routing</a></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/recording-audio/routing-between-applications/title="Routing between applications"class=dd-item><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/recording-audio/routing-between-applications/>Routing between applications</a></li></ul></li><lidata-nav-id=/ardour-tutorial/en/editing-sessions/title="Editing sessions"class="dd-item
<spanclass=links><ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/>Home</a> > <ahref=/ardour-tutorial/en/editing-sessions/>Editing sessions</a> > Working with regions</span></div><divclass=progress><divclass=wrapper><navid=TableOfContents><ul><li><ahref=#selecting-regions>Selecting Regions</a></li><li><ahref=#moving-regions>Moving Regions</a></li><li><ahref=#duplicating-regions>Duplicating Regions</a></li><li><ahref=#using-edit-points>Using Edit Points</a></li><li><ahref=#markers>Markers</a></li><li><ahref=#splitting-regions>Splitting Regions</a></li><li><ahref=#trimming-regions>Trimming Regions</a></li><li><ahref=#deleted-regions>Deleted Regions</a></li><li><ahref=#creating-fades-in-regions>Creating Fades in Regions</a></li><li><ahref=#crossfading-between-two-regions>Crossfading Between Two Regions</a></li><li><ahref=#using-grid-settings>Using Grid Settings</a></li><li><ahref=#continuing>Continuing</a></li></ul></nav></div></div></div></div><divid=head-tags></div><divid=body-inner><h1>Working with regions</h1><p>Sections of audio are called <em>regions</em> in Ardour. To compose the short rhythmic
passage we’ve been working on, we will need to know how to <em>select</em>, <em>move</em>,
<em>split</em> and <em>trim</em> these regions, as well as how to <em>fade in</em> or <em>fade out</em>
their volume and create <em>crossfades</em> between them. Some of these options may
need to happen at specific <em>edit points</em> in the composition, or according to the
musical <em>meter</em> we can define with the <em>timeline</em> and the <em>grid</em> as well.</p><h2id=selecting-regions>Selecting Regions</h2><p>The <em>Grab</em> mode (<strong>G</strong> shortcut) is the tool to select and move objects. It is
located just below the transport menu in the <em>Editor</em> window (the little “hand”
icon). You will use this tool a lot in your Ardour work.</p><p><imgsrc=en/ardour7-grab-mode.pngalt="Object Tool"></p><p>When it is active, your mouse pointer will look like a little hand icon.</p><p>Try all of the operations below, for practice:</p><ul><li><p>Click on the waveform of the region to select it. Click and drag on a region
to move it around (left and right within the same track, but also up and down
onto other tracks).</p></li><li><p>Use <strong>Ctrl+Click</strong> to create and drag around a <em>copy</em> of the region.</p></li><li><p>You can select multiple regions by holding the <strong>Shift</strong> key while clicking
on each region you want to select.</p></li><li><p>You can also drag a selection box over multiple regions to select them all.</p></li></ul><p><imgsrc=en/ardour7-object-selection.pngalt="object selection"></p><ul><li><p>Move multiple regions at the same time after selecting them.</p></li><li><p>You can select several sequential regions on one track all at once by holding
down the <strong>Shift</strong> key while selecting the first and the last regions of the
sequence (copy a few regions on the same track to try this out).</p></li><li><p>When you select a single region, make sure to click on the waveform section of
its rectangle. The lower stripe with the region name is used for a different
action (see the <em>Trimming Regions</em> section below).</p></li><li><p>Use the <strong>Del</strong> key to delete selected regions.</p></li><li><p>Standard copy (<strong>Ctrl+C</strong>), cut (<strong>Ctrl+X</strong>), and paste (<strong>Ctrl+V</strong>)
operations also work with regions.</p></li></ul><h2id=moving-regions>Moving Regions</h2><p>While moving a region, a <em>timecode</em> will appear on the screen in yellow numbers.
This timecode is the region’s starting point on the timeline. The unit of this
timecode is the same as the unit of the primary clock, which you can change by
right-clicking on the clock and choosing a new unit (<em>Minutes:Seconds</em>,
<em>Bar:Beats</em>, etc).</p><p>You can move regions horizontally (sideways) to a different point in time on the
same track, or you can move the selected region vertically (up or down) to a
different track.</p><p>When a set of one or more regions is selected, you can move the whole set by
dragging with the mouse.</p><divclass="notices note"><p>Make sure to select the region in its waveform section, because selecting the
bottom title bar area is used for a different action (see <em>Trimming Regions</em>
below).</p></div><h2id=duplicating-regions>Duplicating Regions</h2><p>In addition to <strong>Ctrl+Click+Drag</strong> and standard copy/paste, Ardour offers
other handy ways to duplicate regions. Use the <em>Grab</em> mode (select/move
objects) to select one or more regions, then use the <em>Duplicate</em> function to
make one or more copies (menu <code>Regions > Duplicate</code>). Three options are
available:</p><ul><li><p><em>Duplicate</em> (shortcut <strong>Alt+D</strong>): make a copy of the selected region on
the same track, immediately after the original.</p></li><li><p><em>Multi-Duplicate</em> (shortcut <strong>Shift+D</strong>): make multiple copies of the
selected region at once (same track, in sequence). You can specify the number
of duplications.</p></li><li><p><em>Fill Track</em>: make as many copies of the selected region as needed to fill
the entire track, all the way up to the <em>End</em> marker on the timeline.</p></li></ul><p>In the following screenshot, regions have been duplicated using the methods
above.</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Region_Duplicate.pngalt=Duplicate></p><h2id=using-edit-points>Using Edit Points</h2><p>When you use the standard copy/cut/paste commands, where exactly will the
regions be pasted? The exact location is determined by the edit point
drop-down menu.</p><p><imgsrc=en/ardour7-edit-point-menu.pngalt="Edit Point"></p><p>If <em>Mouse</em> is selected as the edit point, the copied region will be pasted at
the current position of the mouse.</p><p>If <em>Playhead</em> is selected as the edit point, the copied region will be pasted
at the red playhead line on the same track where the original region is.</p><p>Finally, if <em>Marker</em> is selected as the edit point, then the copied region
will be pasted immediately after the currently selected <em>location marker</em>.</p><h2id=markers>Markers</h2><p>It is very useful to be able to tag different locations in a session for later
use when editing and mixing. Ardour supports several ways for doing this. The
most common method is using <em>location markers</em>, which define specific positions
in time.</p><p>Location markers can be added to the timeline by right-clicking on the
<em>Location Markers</em> strip and selecting <em>Add New Location Marker</em>. If you don’t
see the <em>Location Markers</em> strip, right-click on the timeline and select it to
make it visible. Location markers can also be selected with the mouse and
moved to new positions. Right-clicking on a location marker lets you rename
the marker, among other options.</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Location_Marker.pngalt="Loc Marker"></p><divclass="notices tip"><p>When you first create a new session, two location markers are automatically
added by default. These are the <em>start</em> and <em>end</em> markers that you see in
the screenshot above. If you don’t see the <em>end</em> marker, zoom out enough and
you will find it.</p></div><h2id=splitting-regions>Splitting Regions</h2><p>To <em>split</em> a region simply means to divide a single region into two independent
regions. There are two ways of accomplishing this:</p><ul><li><p>You can use the <em>Cut</em> mode (<strong>C</strong> shortcut) to point and click anywhere you
want to split; or</p></li><li><p>You can stay in the <em>Grab</em> mode and use the <strong>S</strong> shortcut (for “Split”).
In this last case, the point at which a region will be split depends on the
currently selected edit point. If <em>Mouse</em> is selected as your current edit
point, select a region and place the cursor at the point you would like to
<em>Split</em>, then type <strong>S</strong>" (same as going to menu <code>Edit > Split Region</code>).</p></li></ul><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Split_Region.pngalt=Split></p><p>After being split, the original single region becomes two independent regions,
entirely independent. You can move and edit them separately.</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Split_Region_Moved.pngalt=Split></p><p>Regions can also be split by using the playhead or a marker as the edit point.</p><p>The split regions will receive a name derived from the original name of its
parent region, and you will see this reflected in your regions list. For
example, in the image above, you see two regions called <em>pink.15</em> and <em>pink.16</em>,
which means there were split from a parent region called “pink” (not shown in
image).</p><divclass="notices tip"><p>Splitting ranges will follow your grid settings. For example, if you have an
active grid set for bars, splits will happen at the bar boundaries. If you
choose <em>No Grid</em>, splits will happen wherever the edit point is, regardless of
any grid.</p></div><h2id=trimming-regions>Trimming Regions</h2><p>If you move the cursor near the left or right side edge of a region, you will
see that the pointer becomes an arrow. Click and drag inwards from either end
of the region, and the region will be shortened accordingly. This is called
<em>trimming</em> the region. Regions can be trimmed from the start of the region
(drag from left to right at the edge) or from the end (drag from right to
left).</p><p>This action is non-destructive: no audio is actually being deleted. It is as
if you were just “hiding” those portions of the region that you don’t want or
don’t need anymore. Later on, you can “un-trim” the region (i.e., extend it
back to its original full size), even if it has been moved or copied to a new
track.</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Trimming_Regions.gifalt=Trim></p><divclass="notices tip"><p>Like splitting, trimming will obey grid settings. If you don’t want your
trimming to be constrained to any grid, simply turn the grid off (<em>No Grid</em>).</p></div><h2id=deleted-regions>Deleted Regions</h2><p>Because Ardour is non-destructive, the regions you have deleted from tracks
are not completely removed from the session. They can always be accessed again
from the region list on the far right side of the <em>Editor</em> window (Regions can
be dragged from the list onto any tracks).</p><h2id=creating-fades-in-regions>Creating Fades in Regions</h2><p>A <em>fade</em> is a change in the volume of a region, either as the region starts or
as it ends. A fade at the start of the region is a <em>fade in</em>, and at the end
of a region it is a <em>fade out</em>. Each region has two small handles along the
top corners, which can be dragged inwards from either edge to create a fade in
or fade out. The screenshot below shows a fade in (indicated by the shaded
area).</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Fades_1.pngalt=Fades1></p><p>In fact, every region has a fade in and fade out built-in. By default, the
region fade is very short and serves to avoid clicks in the transitions at
the start and end of the region. By adjusting the regions fade length as shown
above, a more gradual transition can be accomplished.</p><p>By right-clicking on one of the fades (the shaded area), the speed of the fade
can also be adjusted.</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Fade_Options.pngalt="Fade Options"></p><h2id=crossfading-between-two-regions>Crossfading Between Two Regions</h2><p>When one region fades out while another fades in, this is called a
<em>crossfade</em>. If the two regions are in different tracks, you can use the
method described above with the fade in and fade out handles. The following
screenshot shows an example.</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Crossfade_1.pngalt=Crossfade></p><p>However, if both regions are in the same track, you need to overlap them in
order to create a crossfade. When regions overlap on the same track, Ardour
treats them as <em>layers</em>, that is, one of the regions is considered to be on
top of the other. The important rule to understand is:</p><p><em>The fade in (or fade out) of the topmost region represents the crossfade
between the two regions.</em></p><p>Once you understand this principle, it’s easy to create and control crossfades
between regions. Here’s an example. The two separate regions seen below will
be made to overlap in order to create a crossfade.</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Crossfade_2.pngalt=Crossfade2></p><p>Note that we did not add any extra fade out to the first region, but we did
add a longer fade in to the second region. Then we drag the second region
partly on top of the first:</p><p><imgsrc=en/Ardour4_Crossfade_3.pngalt=Crossfade3></p><p>The fade in of the second region works now as the crossfade between the two
regions. In other words, the first region will fade out in a mirror image way
as the second region fades in.</p><p>In order for this to work, though, we need to make sure that the region that
has the desired fade is <em>on top</em> in Ardour’s layering system. In order to
change layering of regions, select a region and go to the menu <code>Region > Layering</code>.</p><p><imgsrc=en/ardour7-crossfade-4.pngalt=Crossfade4></p><p>The difference may be hard to hear if you are doing this with the very short
percussive sounds we imported earlier. To really hear the effect, import a
couple of longer samples to try it out (for example, a sample of rain sounds,
and another of a human voice). Overlap several seconds of your long samples on
the same track. You will hear the difference as you move the second region to
the bottom (<em>Lower to Bottom</em>), and then back to top (<em>Raise to Top</em>). When
it’s on top, we will hear the desired crossfade. When it’s at the bottom, we
will hear no crossfade, just an abrupt change from first to second region
(assuming your first region has no fade out specified, as in the screenshots
above).</p><h2id=using-grid-settings>Using Grid Settings</h2><p>Experiment with the <em>Grid Mode</em> setting, as discussed in the <em>Setting Up the
Timeline</em> chapter, to give different kinds of quantization — in other
words, to constrain the boundaries of each region to certain grid points.
Here, the grid has been activated and set to <em>Beats/16</em>, to quantize the
regions to sixteenth notes within each bar. You may wish to trim the endpoints
of some of the samples, as discussed above, to fit within the metric structure
you have set up.</p><p><imgsrc=en/ardour7-beat.pngalt=Beat></p><h2id=continuing>Continuing</h2><p>In the next chapter, we will explore a few more things you can do with regions</p><p>Next: <ahref=../further-region-operations>FURTHER REGION OPERATIONS</a></p><footerclass=footline></footer></div></div><divid=navigation></div></section><divstyle=left:-1000px;overflow:scroll;position:absolute;top:-1000px;border:none;box-sizing:content-box;height:200px;margin:0;padding:0;width:200px><divstyle=border:none;box-sizing:content-box;height:200px;margin:0;padding:0;width:200px></div></div><scriptsrc=/ardour-tutorial/js/clipboard.min.js?1649613348></script>