

When you play what you exported from Sonar in Audacity, does it play at the wrong speed? At least in-house you have control of the sample rate. Maybe one must buy a version of Sonar above Home Studio to get it to work right. The only way I got it fixed was to import into Audacity and up the tempo/pitch. I tried exporting it in every way I could. Tried exporting to the desktop.Same results ustrating. I've listened to all your offerings on SoundCloud Nat.I'm a great admirer and fan of your music.I just don't always comment to avoid seeming like a fanboy.Lol. I was more comfortable with tape, faders, and rack effects, and even then, I wasn't exactly George Martin.Lol.Īnd you're welcome. I will try that.I just cannot understand why it slows I'm an idiot with this digital stuff, I admit that. I have not tried exporting to the desktop. I export audio, (the whole mix) to.And I've tried ALL the formats, to my Downloads folder. That latest song I've uploaded is an old, old thing 1999 or thereabouts - my first attempt to program midi drums, attempting as much realism as I could manage.very tedious mouse work - my absolutely un-favorite way to make music. I skipped the Sound Forge step because I have been having issues with Sound Forge working with my Audio Interface.ĪJ - do you export from Sonar first to a wav or mp3 or similar file? And then upload that? Or are you using some Sonar feature that takes the soundfile directly from Sonar to these hosting services?įWIW I always export the two-track mixdown from Sonar to my desktop, then I upload from there.I don't have your issue with a changing speed.īTW - thx for the comments on Soundcloud.

In Sonar there is not re-sampling option provided but something tells me this is done behind the scenes. Next I import the Master from OZone into Sonar, perform the trim fade using automation and finally, export as 16/44.1 and everything works.

I export 24/96 out of Sonar (no dithering), then I Master in OZone 8 and export another 24/96 from OZone. Not sure which verson of Sonar you are using but here are mine steps: There is a feature in Sound Forge to perform-re sampling, if you turn this off, all of your audio gets slower than the original. As Mike indicated, you need to perform re-sampling.įor example: In Sony Sound Forge, when I import 24/96 audio from Sonar and attempt to convert to 44.1 without re sampling, it gets very slow. If you are converting the Sample Rate without Re sampling, it will get slow. I've tried all the help files, but no matter what format I use, when I export mixes from Sonar to Dropbox, to SoundCloud, they sound markedly SLOWER? The only way they sound right is directly from Sonar.what gives? Is there some big secret? HELP!!
