Although all the process of recording an audio or MIDI performance can
be done in any mode, the Recorder provides a synoptic view of
most parameters and actions related to capturing this performance, hence
giving more confidence in the final result.
The Recorder is another view on settings, parameters, and actions
that can be set or called in other modes. Any change done in the Recorder
is instantly reflected in e.g. the Editor, and vice versa.
The Recorder, being a mode, sports the same main
menu, status bar, and
toolbar as the Editor and Mixer. It adds a secondary toolbar, a
simplified session view, reminiscent of the Editor, and a global input
panel.
The Secondary Toolbar
The subsections below describe the secondary toolbar from left to right.
Last Take Manager
This manager displays information about the last (or current) take :
A duration display, that shows the duration of the last (or
current) recording. It is always displayed as hours:minutes:seconds:tenths,
regardless of the Transport clocks
display settings.
An x-run counter, an x-run being a buffer under(or over)flow. Each
time such an x-run occurs, an artifact is recording, that can be
audible or not, but is a red flag for the recording quality.
A Discard Last Take button, that deletes the last
finished recording(s), effectively removing the audio file(s) from
the hard drive, hence destructive.
This last button cannot be used while recording, the transport must be
stopped. It also has no concept of history, and repeatedly
clicking it wont discard previous takes from last to first, in order to
prevent destroying good takes. Lastly, it does not reset the playhead
position, as the Transport > Stop and Forget
Capture menu would.
Global Arm
Like the Monitor Options below, these buttons apply to all
the tracks at once.
It is a convenient shortcut to arm (All)/disarm (None)
all the tracks for recording.
Monitoring Options
These buttons allow switching the monitoring mode globally, for all the
tracks at once. The monitoring mode allows to decide what the user wants
to be listening to, between:
All In: all the tracks play what is on their Inputs,
All Disk: all the tracks play the actual content of the
playlist on Disk,
or both: also called "cue monitoring" if both buttons are
engaged, a combination of the two modes above, where all the tracks
play existing data from disk while also listening to the input
signal. This is particularly useful for MIDI tracks, where one can
hear a performance/new material while listening to the playback of
existing material in the track.
The Auto Input switch allows Ardour to auto-select
what is played, which is:
When not playing: all tracks are on In (to listen to any connected source)
When playing, all tracks are on Disk (to play whatever was recorded on those tracks)
When recording, on rec-enabled tracks: In and on non rec-enabled ones: Disk
If Auto Input is disabled, then you will hear the Input being
monitored whenever a track is armed, even if you aren't actually
recording. If Auto Input is _enabled_, then you will hear playback
when the transport is rolling, and the tracks will only switch to
Input when the master-record arm is engaged (so you are actually
recording).
'New Playlist' buttons
Recording multiple takes can easily be done in Ardour by using
playlists, as a track can have
multiple playlists and it is easy to switch
from one to another.
The two buttons create new, "blank", playlists to record on:
New Playlist for All Tracks creates a
new playlist for each visible track, while
New Playlist for Rec-Armed uses the
● recording
status of each track to generate new playlists.
Creating new playlists is both cheap in terms of CPU and memory, and easy
to revert by changing the track's playlist back to its previous one. Playlists
on different tracks can also share the same name, allowing for a better
workflow when recording: Ardour suggests Take.#n as the
name for each playlist, so that they stay somewhat correlated.
Disk space and Reset Peaks
Disk space shows how many time or recoding is available on
the current hard drive (i.e. the hard drive where the session is
located), by accounting the bit depth, sampling rate, and number of
armed tracks. The result is either an duration, or
>24h if it exceeds 24 hours.
Reset Peak Hold clears the memory of the highest recording level
in the meters located in the bottom input panel, and displayed with a
green line.
Tracks
The Simplified Session View is a view of the session, specifically
tailored for the purpose of recording, that is similar to the Editor
(or the Summary) with notable differences,
among which:
it always encompasses the whole session in the time axis,
the regions are displayed as blocks, not waveforms,
no editing, like moving or resizing regions, is possible
each track (or lane) has a fixed and narrow height
All those differences are consequences of the aim of this view, which
is to keep thing not too busy and clear in a recording context. The
most important settings related to the recording process are easily
available and to facilitate the work of the operator.
Simplified Session View
Each lane is made of (from left to right):
A zone showing grouping, as in the
Editor, with the same functions and menus.
A ● rec-arm button. When armed,
the entire button will turn pink, and change to bright red as soon
as the transport is rolling and the track is recording. Right-clicking will allow to en/disable
Rec-safe, protecting the track against accidental
recording.
An Input button displaying the connected input(s) of the
track. It is the same button as the Input button shown in
the Mixer strip, and behaves
exactly the same way (Left-clicking to
show the input menu, Right-clicking shows
the input connection matrix).
A P playlist button displaying the connected input(s) of
the track. Again, it is the same button as the one shown in the Editor's track header, and
behaves exactly the same way (Left-clicking to show the playlist menu).
A Track Name label, displaying the track's name.Double-clicking allows to edit (rename) the
track.
Two In and Disk buttons allowing to set this
particular track's monitoring option, as described above.
N level meters showing the input level of the track, as in
the Editor's track header,
N being the number of input channels of the track.
A n numbered
button, using the track's color as
background color. Numbering can be useful when using OSC, a MIDI
controller, or when recording multiple performances at once.
An overview of the track's content, with solid blocks representing
regions. The region's color is the track color, except while
recording where the recorded regions are displayed in red.
Like in the Editor or Mixer, a new track, bus or VCA can
be created by either double or right-clicking on an empty place in the track
list.
The Global Input Panel
This panel lists all the audio and MIDI system inputs.
The inputs are displayed either vertically or horizontally based on the
Preferences.
If an input is used by a track that is armed for recording, it sports
a red frame.
The controls on each input are:
a (1) button indicating how many tracks are fed by this
input. Clicking this button will show only those tracks.
a + button, allowing to create a track that will be
automatically connected to this input. The type of track (MIDI or
aurio) depends on the input type.
a PFL button, or Pre-Fader Listen, active only
if Use monitor section in this session is
checked in the Session
Properties. When active, sends the soloed signal to the Monitor.
a Input's Name button. Inputs can be named or renamed at
will, to ease the recognition of e.g. one microphone in a
multi-track recording, like a multi-instrumentalist performance, by
clicking the button. Ardour stores this name for the device, so any
later session using this input will show this label.
The right hand side of the input depends on the kind of input, either
audio or MIDI. For an audio track:
a live level-meter for this input that shows the current level of
the audio signal. A green line marks the Peak Hold, i.e.
the maximum level reached on this input.
a continuous waveform, showing the input state during the last 5 seconds.
For an MIDI track:
a channel indicator, the channel numbers lighting up as events come
in to show channel activity.
a MIDI monitor, showing the last four MIDI events.