John, You can automate your EQ so that the settings change along the timeline. You might find it simpler, though, to break the scenes out onto different tracks with their own EQ plugs. The first approach is a little trickier to set up, but is less processor- and disk-intensive. The second approach will be easy to set up, but will be more taxing on your system resources. But if you have decent hardware, and not a lot of other plugins or tracks going, it should be fine either way. Skip On Tue, 23 Dec 2008 09:45:21 -0500, John Kilgour <john@...> wrote: > I have a dialog track from a film that I am mixing. All of the > scenes for the film were exported as 1 track - for 90 minutes. I > need to EQ different scenes - now, here is the question: Do I need > to break the track into different channels to have diffent EQ > settings for each scene, or is there a way I can keep the audio all > on this one track, and have each scene EQ'ed sperately. Does my > question make sense?? > > John -- "You can't have everything - where would you put it?" -- Steven Wright
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Re: [Logic_Cafe] Logic Question---
2008-12-23 by Skip Leeds
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