Using Click/Tracks/Samples in a Worship Environment – 2 of 6 – Tracking in Reason
Posted by Jonathan Bryant on Friday May 22, 2009 Under Foothills, Gear, MusicHere’s a simple tutorial on Reason. Make sure you check out my post 1 of 6 on Equipment.
First off in Reason you’ll open an empty rack (automatically when you click New in the File menu)
Next we’ll select an Instrument to use. You can do this a couple of ways:
1 – Click Create in the top menu and Click on Create Instrument.
2 – Drag an instrument from the menu bar on the right
3 – Click Create Instrument in the Menu bar on the right.
Any of those three ways will bring up this screen…

In this screen, find the instrument you want by navigating the menus and selecting the sound that best suits your application.
A side note, if your MIDI controller is plugged in you can sample the sounds as you click through this menu. VERY HELPFUL!
Next, it’s simple, you’re gonna hit the record button on the bottom and play your sound as the track records your notes.
Here is what it will look like after you add two instruments and record different parts:

A couple tips:
1 – if you arm the CLICK button (bottom lefthand corner of the main window) it will give you an audible metronome so you can play in time
2 – The time can be adjusted with the tempo input right next to the click button.
3 – If you arm the PRE button, it will give you a 4count before it starts recording… this good for coming in on the down beat
4 – The Click Level can be adjusted right beneath the click and pre buttons.
5 – Notice in the last picture there is a Reverb module attached to the last instrument. To achieve this, after you add an instrument simply add (from the Create menu) Reverb, Delay, Distortion, Flange, Phase, etc. Try combining these effects also… it’s a BLAST!
Now to the mixdown process.
Once you’re recorded a bunch of tracks, your rack should look like this…

Notice that every instrument you added to the rack has also been added to mixer at the top. As you play your tracks, you can pull the faders up or down as needed to mix the song… just like a live mixer. Need more keys? Just pull the fader up. Less pad? Pull the fader down. Your synth sound needs to cut through the mix? Change the EQ on the mixer to compensate. SIMPLE!!

Like I said, this is a basic tutorial. I post 4 we’ll talk about how to bounce this into Ableton Live for live use. Also, in more advanced posts, we’ll discuss Automation (mixing different parts of the song differently by making faders move on their own), different instruments and effects, etc.
Stay tuned for the next post on tracking in Garageband and/or Protools. This will be helpful in compensating for a missing player, as you can record live parts and attach them to your tracks.
Again if you have any questions, email me at JonathanTBryant@gmail.com or comment on the blog. Thanks and have a great day!





