Chris, we all have to pay our dues in whatever we want to achieve and asking dumb questions is in every avenew of lifes journey. I have been learning the guitar this last year after about 5 years of attempts, but am now taking off the training weels and starting to ride a little. The thing is, when you're 11 years old playing the guitar and you play Merry had a little lam you feel like Jack the giant killer, but when your in your thirties and you play twinkle, twinkle little star, you feel like a bafoon, so yeh, it is easy to feel dumb, but it is simply par for the corse as they say. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Krister Ekstrom" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2013 11:16 AM
Subject: Re: How much of editing can blind people actually do in PT?


Hey,
Just let me add something to my previous reply to your mail. The reason why i haven't asked any specific questions as of now may sound very silly indeed, but it's because i felt and to a certain extent still feel stupid asking these newbie questions that i should know the answer to, but as i said before, those specific questions will start coming.
/Krister

19 maj 2013 kl. 19:25 skrev Poppa Bear <[email protected]>:

Chris, if you can get about an hour of quality time with somebody who is blind and uses PT it may take you further than you could go a month on your own. I got PT about a year ago and for the first 3 months stumbled around with it and then about 3 months ago I dug back in and got a good handle on it. I mainly use Sonar for recording, but it is because in the world of PC recording Sonar has been my native language so to speak. The thing with any of this is that you have to take in one bite at a time. It is just like when your blind and go into a new setting like a new house, it is very dificult to understand the intire layout of the structure, you have to bump around for a while and start to understand the place in your own way, each step, each wall, each door. This is what it is like in PT. First you keep it basic, do a basic 2 or four track recording, try to enjoy it, then once you struggle through that process, try to slap an fx or two on one or two tracks, figure out how to bounce down and then maybe on your next project tinker with what you have learned and then try and tinker with the busses and then move on to something else, but trying to figure out everything at once can be like putting the cart before the horse. I have heard you talk about your woes on here, about how discouraging you feel, but I have not came across many spacific PT questions. I don't catch every message on here of corse, but if you have one spacific problem, let us try and tackle that and you may find that as you take one step at a time you sometimes take two or even three steps foward. I know many of us have put our last dimes into trying to make this music dream happen, but try to have a positive attitude and a stiff upper lip soldier.
HTH
----- Original Message ----- From: "Krister Ekstrom" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2013 5:03 AM
Subject: Re: How much of editing can blind people actually do in PT?


And here's a followup question: can we at all do tempo changes in Pro tools? Would be cool if we could.
/Krister

19 maj 2013 kl. 14:09 skrev Krister Ekstrom <[email protected]>:

Hi,
I have now studied a tutorial, (understanding Protools), where they talk much about editing audio and midi to make good quality in songs etc, and i understand that midi is a no go for us blind people but how much audio editing can we actually do, or is that too a no go?
/Krister

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