A version of this article originally appeared on Performer Magazine.
Sometimes when you're in the process of building your own home studio, the hardware and gear might be the easy part. What's not so easy is finding your way around the perfect software. So, whether your home setup is an elaborate basement behemoth or a USB jack, here are five Pro Tools tips you can start using right now!
You probably already use Memory Locations as markers, but did you know you can also use them to create custom views in your session? Memory Locations can remember which tracks are shown, track heights, zoom settings, and also the layout of Pro Tools' windows.
For example, you can store focus views of different instrument groups. The screenshot below shows a memory location that recalls FX return tracks and uses a Window Configuration to open the reverb and delay plugins.
Shortcut tip: To recall a memory location from the keyboard, press period on the keypad, then the location number, followed by period again.
Pro Tools professionals live by their template sessions. A template saves a bunch of time-consuming setup work by starting a project with all your tracks, plugins, routing, groups, and view options in place. Any session can be used as a template by choosing File > Save As Template. The screenshot below is a template for tracking a small band. There are tracks ready for drum mics, a bass DI and mic, a vocal mic, and some guitars. Each group has been color-coded and routed to a submix (see tip three).
Shortcut tip: To change to several tracks at once (e.g. set output, add plugin, etc.) select the tracks, then hold Shift+Alt while making the change.
There are often occasions when you want to route a track to another track. A common example is routing the outputs of several tracks to an aux track to create a submix with processing on it. Other examples include creating sends on many tracks to a reverb return, or to a headphone mix master. Recent versions of Pro Tools make this an easy task with no need to make buses or tracks manually. The screenshot below shows this trick being used to create a drum master bus. The drum tracks are selected, and the "do to selected" shortcut is being held.
In the Output Selector menu, there are options for Track and New Track, as well as the Output and Bus menus. Choosing Track will let you route to an existing track in the mixer, while New Track will bring up the window below, asking you to choose a track type and name for the submix. Everything else will be taken care of for you.
Elastic Time and Pitch are technologies in Pro Tools that you may have used to warp and time-correct your recordings. Here are a couple of other uses:
The Pro Tools Workspace can audition loops in time with your session. Right-click the audition button to see all the options (see the screenshot below). Now if your session is playing, loops will be previewed in time!
If you want to change the tempo of the whole song and have all tracks follow the grid, do the following: First, enable Elastic Audio on every audio track (see the screenshot below). You can do this by holding Alt while changing any track’s mode, or you can select between polyphonic or rhythmicon a track-by-track basis.
Next, switch every track into "Ticks" timebase mode (screenshot below). This means the tracks follow the bars/beats grid instead of absolute time. Now any changes you make to the overall session tempo or the tempo ruler will affect the whole song.
The audio engine in Pro Tools 11 and 12 lets you set a very small hardware buffer and enjoy low latency when recording and monitoring through Pro Tools. Sometimes, though, you get to work on the mix, then try recording an overdub and hear a delay in the input signal. This is usually because you’ve added plugins with inherent processing latency, such as bus compressors/limiters. No problem – simply make sure that the output of the record track is routed directly to the output you're monitoring through instead of to an internal bus. Pro Tools will work behind the scenes to make sure what you play is bang in time with the rest of the mix.
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Simon Sherbourne is a Pro Tools specialist at Avid and was previously a columnist for Sound on Sound. For more info, follow him on Twitter @simonsherbourne.