Using Vital 1.5.5 (free version) on Linux 22.04. Considering buying the pro version.
Using Reaper 6.77
I have a WAV file. It’s spelled like “Korg-01W-Alans-Run-C4.wav”, and I’ve also tried “korgtest.wav”.
With these files or any like them, I see people on youtube drag and drop them from a folder on their desktop so it’s on top of the oscillator (which is opened in a DAW). In their videos, like this one at 12 seconds, hovering the file over the oscillator shows 3 options: Wavetable, Vocode, and Pitch Splice.
But none of those show up for me. Instead, the WAV file gets added as another track in my DAW (Reaper). I also tried resizing the windows as a reply below shows, but still no luck.
QUESTIONS
Is this possible only for the paid version?? If yes, I’ll buy, but just want to be sure.
I logged into vital.audio, and it doesn’t show all the 400+ presets for the pro version. Anyone know where I can hear them all?
Thanks, but that doesn’t work. The wav file I’m testing is here, a Korg 01/W Alan’s Run C4. If you download it, this is the filename: Korg-01W-Alans-Run-C4.wav
No capitals in the WAV extension.
I changed that file name to just “korgtest.wav” too, and it still does the same thing (no 3 options visible, just adds it as a new track to Reaper).
And I just tried everything suggested before on those those ones. Nothing worked.
Although, my real goal is to make guitars that sound real. If you have a direction you coould point me in for doing that, that’d be awesome.
Anyways, I have a dual boot system with windows 10, so as a test, I’ll check to see if the same problem exists on there with reaper + vital. Because so far it’s looking to me like reaper might have some event handler that’s overriding the one for vital, thus preventing it from showing the 3 options.
Just did my tests with reaper and vital. Windows 10 shows the 3 options just fine, and I didn’t even have to resize the windows. Linux still shows nothing, so it’s a bug.
Either way, it’s not a big deal. I have another sampler, and I found some stuff showing me how to make realistic sounds better.