Make the source your main stereo mix bus. Choose Stereo, and ideally an interleaved format like AIFF or WAV. Go to the Audio menu and choose Bounce To Disk.ģ. Drag the file into a mono audio track in DP, which has a normal stereo output, and select the resulting soundbite.Ģ. The solution is to make a stereo file from your mono impulse. An example of where all this becomes a problem is when you want to load up an old‑school mono reverb impulse but you've no option to use a mono ProVerb because it's on a stereo track, or in a plug‑in slot beneath another stereo‑output plug‑in. To keep us all thoroughly confused, though, a mono ProVerb will accept both mono and stereo impulse file drags. Likewise surround (and something‑to‑surround) ProVerbs only work with multi‑channel surround impulse files.
A stereo (or mono‑to‑stereo) ProVerb only allows stereo impulse files to be dragged and dropped.
The main reason for this is actually really obvious - or, at least, obvious enough to MOTU that they didn't bother putting it in the DP6 manual.
#IMPORT EZDRUMMER MIDI FILE INTO DIGITAL PERFORMER FREE#
But when you try with some great free impulse responses (like those at or even your own audio files, it sometimes doesn't work, and DP doesn't give any feedback as to why. You're supposed to be able to drag WAV, SDII and AIFF audio files from the Finder on to ProVerb's waveform display to get it to load that audio as an impulse. The ProVerbialįirst things first - let's get to the bottom of the DP6 ProVerb problem. So here's a DP file‑compatibility primer, with fixes for specific problems. It got me thinking: we live in a world jam‑packed with different file formats, and all the specification and compatibility issues that go with them. Over the last few months, I've mentioned a few file format‑related issues that have come up in relation to other DP topics. We present a DP‑user's guide to troubleshooting audio files and formats, and pass on tips for when the unthinkable happens.