Exporting recording as audio stems to USB

Started by TheodorHK04, May 28, 2024, 05:21:19 PM

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TheodorHK04

Hi everyone,
So, I want to record me playing to a style on the Genos (I have the original Genos and not the Genos 2). I know I could record everything as a MIDI file and then solo the individual tracks in a DAW and route them back through the Genos to hear the audio. But is there no way of getting a song as audio stems from the Genos, so that I could easily listen to what each instrument in the style is doing, without having to route a MIDI file back into the Genos? If so, exactly how to do it? I've been messing around with the Genos with assistance from someone with vision and we can't figure anything out. This board is complicated.

Theódór Helgi

pjd

Idea #1 -- Send audio for each style part through a separate audio output. Record the style parts using your DAW.

Click the Menu button. Tap the "Line Out" button on the Menu1 page. The "Line Out" settings route audio for specific parts to specific audio outputs. Use the switch in the upper right corner and select "Sub 3-4". You can route parts to Main (L+R), Sub1, Sub2, Sub3, and Sub4. If you have a multi-channel audio interface, you could record each output as a separate stem through the DAW.

This might require multiple stakes in order to record individual stems for the style parts.

pjd

Idea #2 -- Record each style part individually in Audio Multi-Recording. Export each part as a WAV file to USB flash drive.

Audio Multi-Recording offers two tracks for recording: Main and Sub. Enable only one Style part in the mixer. Record the part. Tap the Menu icons in the upper right corner and use Export to write the track as a WAV file on a USB drive. Do this for every style part.

Transfer the WAV files to your personal computer and import the WAV files into the DAW.

Yeah, it's a lot of work!

Good luck -- pj

Amwilburn

Not to mention the insane amount of audio synchronization /alignment of tracks you'll need to do, especially if you don't include an identical count in for each track...


Michael Trigoboff

It seems to me that you might be able to just record the audio into your the DAW multiple times, reducing the volume of all but one voice/part to zero each time.
retired software developer and Computer Science instructor
Grateful Deadhead emeritus

"He had decided to live forever or die in the attempt."
-- Joseph Heller, Catch-22

Brian 007

Hi,

if you have an audio interface and cakewalk DAW which is free, when you come to record your piece it gives you the option to
record all the tracks separately in one operation as audio

Brian007

JohnS (Ugawoga)

Why not send a complete style a song length to Cubase and then layer your tracks or make takes.
You then have all the software in the world to play with. :)
Genos 2     AMD RYZEN  9 7900  12 Core Processor 32 ram,   Focusrite Scarlet 4i4 4th Gen.