Quite a lot depends on the settings you use for the voice, whether you’re in the singer’s “natural” range, whether you tweak phonemes or not, and so on. Once you’ve created your vocal lines, you can treat them like any other software instrument, or render them to audio files either way you do all the processing and mixing in the DAW. You have to create a separate MIDI file and import it, or write your voice lines using the plugin’s own piano roll editor.Ī good feature is that all your SynthV project data can be stored within the DAW files, and can also be exported/imported as a separate SynthV project file if there’s any reason you want to work on it in the standalone SynthV app. The voice rendering works in real time for playback (because much of the work is done ahead of time, as you edit the notes), but there’s no way to send MIDI data direct to the plugin. I think the biggest workflow limitation for the plugin is that all your editing has to be done within the plugin, and the UI is not the best. This thread has been very useful, and the Dreamtonics videos on YouTube have some tips, but there’s no good manual to read (or at least, I haven’t found it). I find it works pretty well, though there isn’t a lot of online help to learn from. Click to expand.I can’t comment on Cakewalk Sonar, but I’m doing a lot of work with the plugin in Logic Pro.
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