Now that the guitar riff has been recorded to the Timeline, let's do a little cleanup on the region so it will make a better loop.
Before you can start trimming, you need to understand grid lines.
You're probably wondering what the heck a grid line is, and why we are learning about them now. Great question. Grid lines are the vertical gray lines in the Timeline.
Grid lines act as a guide for aligning the playhead and your regions in the Timeline. They are also used for trimming, which is why they are pertinent at this point in the book.
Grid lines are like the lines on a highway. They maintain order and safety by keeping all traffic separate and moving at the right speed and direction.
In the same way, GarageBand uses grid lines to govern the musical traffic within the Timeline. The grid lines keep order by adhering to the laws of musical time. Remember, musical time consists of separate measures, beats, and clicks within a beat. Grid lines keep all of the regions in the different tracks orderly and in time with one another.
When it comes to trimming a region, grid lines are important because they restrict your ability to trim.
Before you start, it's important that your Snap to Grid setting is on, and that your Timeline grid is set to Automatic.
1. | Choose Control > Snap to Grid and make sure that it is on (checked). |
2. | Click the Timeline Grid button (ruler icon) located in the upper-right corner of the Timeline, and select Automatic from the menu. |
Your goal for this exercise is to trim the silent portion of the recorded region. The sample region has silence at the beginning and end of the region. Silence is no big deal if you're only playing this region once, but what if you want to loop the region? Silence doesn't work well with a loop. Let's demonstrate.
You can override the grid lines for more freedom of movement by turning off the Snap to Grid feature.
With snapping off, you can move the region anywhere. The downside is that you can move the region anywhere. This isn't a problem when you have only one region, but if you have different regions haphazardly placed on different tracks, the parts will be completely out of time with one another. Instrument parts played out of time sound like an orchestra tuning up. It may be interesting, but it sure isn't music.
Tip
Always work with snapping on unless you absolutely have to turn it off. Remember to turn it back on as soon as possible.
Occasionally, you may want to change the snapping parameters within the grid without turning snapping off. The Timeline Grid button looks like a small ruler and is located in the upper-right corner of the Timeline.
Now that you have a better understanding of grid lines and how they keep order in the Timeline, let's look at the grid lines in the Track Editor.
1. | Double-click the recorded region in the Timeline to open it in the Track Editor. Notice the grid lines within the Track Editor. Since the Track Editor has a Zoom slider that is independent of the Timeline, you can also adjust your grid lines in the Track Editor by zooming in and out of it. |
2. | Click-drag the Track Editor's Zoom slider to zoom in to the region. The Track Editor also has a Grid button, independent of the button in the Timeline. |
To trim a recorded Real Instrument region in the Track Editor, all you need to do is click and drag the right or left edge of the region. Your trimming will be restricted to the grid, so you should always zoom in as much as needed for the desired result.
1. | Zoom in or out of the Track Editor until you can clearly see the beginning of the region, as well as the beginning of the music's waveform. |
2. | Move your pointer over the region to see the pointer change to a crosshair. The crosshair can be used for editing inside of a region. In Lesson 9, you learn more about how to edit inside a region using the Track Editor. |
3. | Move your pointer over the lower-left corner and click the mouse to change to a resize pointer. When you are in the lower-left corner, the resize pointer looks like a line with a small arrow pointing to the left. The resize pointer for the lower-right corner looks like a line with a small arrow pointing to the right. If your pointer turned to a crosshair when you clicked, click again to change to the resize pointer. |
4. | Click-drag the lower-left corner of the region with the resize pointer and trim to the 3rd beat of the 1st measure (halfway between the 1st and 2nd measures). The trimmed region will start right on the 3rd beat of the 1st measure. When you trim regions that will be used as loops, it's extremely important to make sure that the region starts and ends on a beat. Note Trimming a region so it begins and ends on a beat is the basis for loop-based production. If your region does not end on a beat, it will gradually drift from the counter and the grid lines as you loop the region over and over in the Timeline. |
5. | In the Timeline, drag the edited region to the beginning of the Timeline so that it begins on the 1st beat of the 1st measure. |
6. | In the Track Editor, click-drag the scroller to view the end of the recorded region. |
7. | Locate the end of the recorded sound at the end of the waveform, and find the 1st beat mark in the Beat Ruler after the waveform ends (2nd beat of the 5th measure). You will be able to trim to the grid line and get as close as possible to the waveform without cutting off any of the sound. Instead of trimming with the resize pointer, let's use the crosshair to edit the end of the region in the Track Editor. To use the crosshair, you simply move the crosshair to the correct position over the region and click-drag where you'd like to make an edit. The area that you select with the crosshair becomes a separate region. |
8. | Move the pointer to the 2nd beat of the 5th measure. If your pointer is over the region in the Track Editor , it should look like a crosshair. |
9. | Click-drag the crosshair from the 2nd beat of the 5th measure to the end of the region in the Track Editor to select that portion of the region. |
10. | Click the selected area with the crosshair to turn it into a separate region. |
11. | Press Delete to delete the selected segment. Remember, regardless of whether you use the resize pointer or the crosshair to trim your recorded regions, you need to make sure that it starts and ends on a beat. The new trimmed region starts on the 1st beat of the 1st measure and ends on the 2nd beat of the 5th measure. |
12. | |
13. | Click-drag the upper-right corner of the region in the Timeline to extend it by one full loop segment. |
14. | Play the two loops to hear the new looped region. Note If you have trouble extending exactly one loop segment, it may be because of the odd size of your trimmed loop. Reopen your loop in the Track Editor and resize the left and right edges of the loop until it starts and ends exactly on a beat. |
It's your turn to create another instrument test. This time you will work with a bass riff performed by my friend Stephen Kanter. Open the project titled 4-3 BassTest Starting from the Lesson_04 folder. Your goal is to trim the silent parts from this recorded region to make a good loop, and then to extend the trimmed region until it repeats one full loop segment. Finally, you'll create a cycle region over the looped bass region and listen to it with different bass sounds while it is playing.