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Torq User Guide

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Torq User Guide

Version 2.0

Legal Notices
This guide is copyrighted 2011 by Avid Technology, Inc., with all rights reserved. Under copyright laws, this guide may not be duplicated in whole or in part without the written consent of Avid Technology, Inc. Avid, the Avid logo, Pro Tools M-Audio, Torq, Conectiv, and Traq Morph are either trademarks or registered trademarks of Avid Technology, Inc. iTunes and iPod are registered trademarks of Apple, Inc. All other trademarks contained herein are the property of their respective owners. Product features, specifications, system requirements, and availability are subject to change without notice. Guide Part Number 9329-65034-00 REV B 02/11

Documentation Feedback
We are always looking for ways to improve our documentation. If you have comments, corrections, or suggestions regarding our documentation, email us at techpubs@avid.com.

Chapter 1. Introduction to Torq 2.0

...............................................................1

Welcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Torq 2.0 Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Using Torq 2.0 With Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 System Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Product Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Chapter 2. Software Installation

..................................................................4

Installation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Activation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

Chapter 3. Torq 2.0 Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12


Setup Assistant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

Chapter 4. Accessing Your Music . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20


The Browser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 File List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

Chapter 5. The Decks

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34

Four Deck Mode vs. Two Deck Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Deck Switch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Loading Songs onto the Decks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Displays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Transport Controls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Markers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Loop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Control (Deck Mode) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Master/Sync . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Speed Slider (SPEED) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Effects (FX) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58

Chapter 6. Waveform Display

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59

Information Shown on the Display . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60

Chapter 7. The Mixer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65


Mixer Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 PFL/Headphone Cue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 Hide Mixer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Crossfader . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Traq Morph . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 Main Out Section . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76

iii

Contents

Chapter 8. Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 Built-In Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84 VST Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94

Chapter 9. Sampler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Signal Source . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 Sampler Controls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98

Chapter 10. Snapshots

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103

Snapshot List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Creating a Snapshot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Masking a Snapshot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 Using Snapshots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 Duplicate Snapshot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Swapping Snapshots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Delete Snapshot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Momentary vs. Latching Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Polyphonic Snapshots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106

Chapter 11. Synchronization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107


Automatic Tempo and Phase Detection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 Phase Grid Manipulations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 Auto Master Deck Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110

Chapter 12. Torq Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111


Audio Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 MIDI Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 External Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 VST Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126 Behavior Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 Locations Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134 GUI Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135

Chapter 13. Rewire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137


Master Tempo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137 Audio Routing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137

Chapter 14. External and MIDI Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139


External Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139 External Control Calibration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140 Resolving Playback Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145 MIDI Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148

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Contents

Chapter 15. MIDI Platter Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150


MIDI Platter Control Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150 MIDI Platter Control Mode and Auto Sync . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151

Appendix A. Key Commands

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152

Browser Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152 Deck Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153 Miscellaneous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158

Appendix B. Torq Vinyl Control System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159


Technical Information and Tips on Torq's Vinyl Control System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159

Appendix C. Warranty

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165

Warranty Terms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165

Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction to Torq 2.0

Welcome
Congratulations on your purchase of Torq. Torq software combines traditional DJ tools with features normally found in advanced audio production applications, such as sampling and VST effects to mix your music on Mac OS X and Windows platforms. To help you achieve the best results, this user guide explains how to setup and configure Torq as well as how to use the extensive features found within the application.

Torq 2.0 Features


Four Decks Optional Two Deck Mode Traq Morph offering four new Crossfader algorithms Standalone functionality without hardware Compatibility with M3, AIFF, WAV, WMA, AAC, and CD Audio Built in effects and signal processors Support for third party VST plug-ins 18 individual samplers for looping and loading samples onto any of the four decks Rewire Support for host applications such as Pro Tools and other qualified DAWs Support for Torq Xponent and qualified third party hardware Support for up to four external control surfaces Deck Switch for controlling four decks with qualified two-deck hardware MIDI Platter Control for resuming playback of paused songs in perfect sync MIDI control assignment MIDI Learn
Each qualified hardware product works with Torq in a different manner. Refer to the documentation provided with your controller for manufacturer specific information. Refer to www.avid.com/torqFAQ for a current list of qualified hardware, the latest news and updates.

Torq 2.0 User Guide

Chapter 1: Introduction to Torq 2.0

Using Torq 2.0 With Windows


Screensaver and Power Options
To avoid system crashes and unexpected errors, Windows user should change or disable the display and power options via the control panel, as described below:
Further information about how to locate and change the options mentioned in this section can be accessed by clicking on the Help menu within a Windows Explorer window.

Screen Saver
Double click on the Display icon in the Control Panel, and choose the appropriate option to disable the screen saver.

Power Options
Double click on the Power options icon in the Control Panel. Once the new window has opened, disable all options that hibernates or put your computer to sleep, as well as any option which turns off or dims the monitor or display. You will also need to disable all disable all options that allow the hard drive to automatically turn off. If available you should also disable the USB Selective Suspend option as well.

ClearType Font Usage in Windows XP


In order to offer the best appearance on LCD displays, Torq uses ClearType fonts when displaying text in various parts of the program. However, this option is disabled by default in Windows XP SP3. If the text or icons in the Torq interface appear jagged or blurry please go to http://www.microsoft.com/typography/cleartype/tuner/step1.aspx for details on how to resolve the issue. Windows Vista and Windows 7 users should not experience this issue because ClearType fonts are enabled by default.
This is a system-wide change, which may affect the fonts used in other applications on your computer.

System Requirements
Avid can only assure compatibility and provide support for hardware and software it has tested and approved. For complete system requirements and a list of qualified third-party hardware, visit www.avid.com/torqFAQ.

Torq 2.0 User Guide

Chapter 1: Introduction to Torq 2.0

Product Registration
Please register your product online at http://www.avid.com/US/support/register-product/torq-2. By doing so, you become eligible to receive the following: Technical support information Software update and upgrade notices Hardware warranty information

Conventions Used in This Guide


The following symbols are used to highlight important information:
User Tips are helpful hints for getting the most from your system. Important Notices include information that could affect your data or the performance of your system. Shortcuts show you useful keyboard or mouse shortcuts. Cross References point to related sections in this guide.

Torq 2.0 User Guide

Chapter 1: Introduction to Torq 2.0

Chapter 2: Software Installation


Installation
The following directions are for installing the Torq software onto your computer. Please follow the installation instructions provided with your hardware device before launching Torq.

Windows 7, Vista, and Windows XP


To install Torq on a Windows computer:
1 2

Place the Torq disc in your CD/DVD drive.

Windows will automatically launch the install screen. (If you are using Windows Vista or XP, and see an Autoplay dialog window, click Run autorun.exe to launch the installer.) If the install screen fails to launch, you can manually start it by clicking on Start > Computer > Torq Disk. If you are using Windows XP, Computer will be labeled My Computer in this step. If you have purchased Torq as a download, locate the zipped installer on your desktop and open it by double clicking the icon; then locate the installer icon and launch it by double clicking the icon.
3 4 5 6 7

Choose your Setup Language, click Next and follow the on-screen instructions When Torq is finished installing, choose Finish. Close the installer screen. Install and connect your qualified hardware. Refer to the documentation provided with your devices. Double-click the Torq application icon to launch the program.

Macintosh OS X
To install Torq on a Mac:
1 2 3

Place the Torq disc in your CD/DVD drive. Double-click the Torq CD icon on your desktop. This will display the contents of the CD. Double-click the installer icon.

If you have purchased Torq as a download, open the downloaded DMG file on your desktop by double clicking it, then locate the installer and launch it by double clicking the icon.
4 5 6 7 8

Follow the on-screen instructions. When installation has completed, select Close. A Torq icon will be placed in the Dock. Install and connect your qualified hardware. Refer to the documentation provided with your devices. Click the icon to launch the program.
4 Chapter 2: Software Installation

Torq 2.0 User Guide

Activation
Once you have completed the software installation, Torq must be activated and authorized using the Avid Activation Tool. This tool can also be used to activate Torq to run as a 30 day trial version.
The 30 day trial period cannot be extended. Torq must be activated and authorized using the Avid Activation Tool if you wish to continue using the application at the end of the trial period. If you deactivate Torq during the 30 day trial period, the application will still launch for the remainder trial. However, as the trial cannot be extended you will need to complete the activation and authorization process

There are two methods of activating Torq as described below:

Automatic Activation
This option lets you register Torq over the Internet.
To activate Torq automatically:
1

Choose Internet Activation and click Next..

Internet Activation

Internet Activation

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. Enter your serial number and System ID in the respective text boxes. Your serial number and system identification number are located inside the enclosed Torq 2.0 Quick Setup Guide. If you purchased Torq online, you received your serial number and system identification number from Avid by e-mail. You can also view your serial number and system identification number by logging in to your support account.

Next
Serial Number and System ID Entered

Torq 2.0 serial numbers start with the letter J and contain only CAPITAL letters. System ID numbers contain only numbers, no letters. If copying and pasting these to Torq, make sure there are no spaces at the beginning or end.
3 4

Click Next and Torq will connect to the Internet and activate automatically.

When you see the Activated screen, your copy of Torq is activated and ready to use. Click Finish, and Torq will continue to launch.
If you have a large number of VST plug-ins installed on your computer, the initial launch of Torq may take a couple of minutes while the application scans the VST folder.

Activated Screen

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Manual Activation
This option lets you activate Torq without an Internet connection.
To activate Torq manually:
1

Choose Manual Activation and click Next.

Manual Activation

Manual Activation
2

Enter your serial number and System ID in the respective text boxes. Your serial number and system identification number are located inside the enclosed Torq 2.0 Quick Setup Guide. If you purchased Torq online, you received your serial number and system identification number from Avid by e-mail. You can also view your serial number and system identification number by logging in to your support account.

Serial Number /System ID

Serial Number an System ID Entered

Torq 2.0 serial numbers start with the letter J and contain only CAPITAL letters. System ID numbers contain only numbers, no letters. If copying and pasting these to Torq, make sure there are no spaces at the beginning or end.
3

Retrieve and Enter an Activation Key. You can retrieve an Activation Key using another computer's Internet connection, or by contacting Avid Customer Support. To retrieve an Activation Key you will need your Serial Number, System ID, and Your machine ID. To retrieve an Activation Key:

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To activate using another computer's Internet connection, go to http://activate.avid.com and enter your Torq 2 Serial Number, System ID, and Your machine ID, and then click Activate or Go to http://www.avid.com/US/support/support-contact#maudio and provide your Torq 2 Serial Number, System ID, and Your machine ID and a support rep will be able to issue an Activation Key
Be sure to select your country or region from the dropdown if you are outside of the US. Activation Keys can be provided by phone or online support.

Enter the Activation Key in the last line of the Manual Activation window. You can type it in, or copy the entire Activation Key from a text file and paste it into the first text box and it automatically fills the rest of the text boxes.
4

Torq 2.0 Activation Keys start with the letter L and contain only CAPITAL letters.

11111-22222-33333-44444-55555

JJJJJ-BBBBB-CCCCC-DDDDD-EEEEE 012345012345

Activation Key

Manual Activation Key Entered


5 6

Click Next.

When you see the Activated screen, your copy of Torq is activated and ready to use. Click Finish and Torq will continue to launch.
If you have a large number of VST plug-ins installed on your computer, the initial launch of Torq may take a couple of minutes while the application scans the VST folder.

Activated Screen

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30-day Trial Activation


If you would like to demo Torq before purchasing, you can activate a 30 day trial version of Torq. The 30 day trial period cannot be extended, and Torq must be activated and authorized if you wish to continue using the application. If you deactivate Torq during the 30 day trial period, the application will still launch for the remainder trial. However, as the trial cannot be extended you will need to complete the activation and authorization process.
To activate Torq for the 30-day trial period:
1

Choose Trial Version and click Next.

Trail Version

Trial Activation

An Internet Connection is NOT required for Trial Activation.


2 When you see the Activated screen, your 30 day trial of Torq is activate and ready to use. Click Finish and the application will continue to launch.

At any time during the 30-day trial period, you can choose to purchase a copy of Torq and use the Activation tool to activate it by clicking the Licensing button in Torq. If you choose not to purchase the software, Torq will deactivate when the trial expires.
If you have a large number of VST plug-ins installed on your computer, the initial launch of Torq may take a couple of minutes while the application scans the VST folder.

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Deactivating Torq
If you want to run Torq on another system, you first must deactivate your software license before you can activate it on a second system. Deactivation occurs while Torq is running, but the deactivation process automatically saves all open bins and the current project.
You must be connected to the Internet to deactivate your software.

To deactivate Torq:
1

While the program is running, click on the Preferences icon in the Toolbar at the top of the Torq interface.

Torq Preferences Icon


2

Click the Licensing button in the lower left of the Torq Preferences screen.

Torq Preferences

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When the Deactivate screen appears, click Next to complete the deactivation process.

Deactivate Screen

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Chapter 3: Torq 2.0 Configuration

Setup Assistant
Once you have completed the installation and activation process, the Torq Setup Assistant will launch, allowing you optimize the of the program to work on your system with qualified hardware. The Setup Assistant lets you use two methods of configuring Torq.

Manual Setup
This method guides you through a detailed set of options for more sophisticated hardware configurations.
To Manually Setup Torq:
1

Choose Manual Setup, then click Next.

Setup Assistant - Manual Setup

Click the pop-up menu on the Audio Device Setup screen and choose the audio device you wish to use from the list of available options, then click Next.
2

Setup Assistant - Audio Device Setup

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When the Mixer Mode screen appears, choose one of the two Mixer modes. If you are going to use an external hardware mixer with Torq, proceed to step 11 under External Mixer Mode on page 16, otherwise proceed to step 4.
3

Internal Mixer Mode

Setup Assistant - Internal Mixer Mode

Choosing Internal Mixer Mode lets you mix all of the Decks within Torq using a hardware controller, such as Torq Xponent, any other qualified third-party controller, or your mouse. While Torq is set to Internal Mixer Mode, the internal mixer will be visible on-screen, and all hardware controller movements will be reflected in the application.
4

Select Internal Mixer Mode, then click Next.

Deck Mode

By default Torq 2.0 is set to run in Four Deck Mode which provides four Decks in the Torq interface. However you also have the option of using the program in the more traditional Two Deck Mode, with two on-screen Deck.
Refer to Four Deck Mode vs. Two Deck Mode on page 35 for more information.

Setup Assistant - Deck Mode


5

Choose the Deck Mode you wish to use, then click Next.

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When the MIDI Device Setup screen appears, choose a MIDI device from the available options, then click Next.
6

Setup Assistant - MIDI Device Setup

If Your MIDI Device is Not Listed

If you do not see a listing for the MIDI device you want to use, click the Refresh Device List button. A Warning screen will appear asking you to confirm that you want Torq to scan for the missing MIDI Device. Read the screen very carefully, then click Yes if you still want to refresh the device list. Once the process has completed, and your device appears, click Next.

Setup Assistant - Refresh Device List Warning

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Torq preselects the most common location for your music folder based on your operating system. If the folder path displayed on the Music Library Setup screen is correct, click Next.
7

If the preselected location is incorrect, click the Browse button to the left of the folder path and navigate to the proper location on your system. Once you have found the folder, click on it once, then click Open (Mac) or OK (Windows). When that window closes, click Next on the Music Library Setup screen.

Setup Assistant - Music Library Setup


8

If you have iTunes installed on your computer, Torq will preselect the default location of your iTunes library based on your operating system. If the folder path displayed on the iTunes Library Setup screen is correct, click Next.
If the preselected location is incorrect, click the Browse button to the left of the folder path and navigate to the proper location on your system. Once you have found the folder, click on it once, then click Open (Mac) or OK (Windows). When that window closes, click Next on the iTunes Library Setup screen.

Setup Assistant - iTunes Library Setup

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Review the information displayed on the Summary screen, then click Next if all the information listed is correct.
If any of the information is incorrect, click Previous to go back to the appropriate page, or click the Gear icon to open the Torq Preferences (see Torq Preferences on page 101) to change the settings.

Setup Assistant - Summary


10

Click Finish on the Enjoy screen.

Setup Assistant - Enjoy

External Mixer Mode


Choosing External Mixer Mode lets you mix you songs with a hardware mixer and an audio device with at least two stereo outputs. However the on-screen mixer will be hidden.
For more information about External Mixer Mode Preferences, refer to External on page 112 and External Mixer Mode Channel Assignments on page 116.
11 12 13

Choose External Mixer Mode, and click Next. When the Deck Mode screen appears choose the number of Torq Decks you want to use, and click Next..l

When the MIDI Device Setup screen appears, choose a MIDI device from the available options, then click Next.

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If Your MIDI Device is Not Listed

If you do not see a listing for the MIDI device you want to use, click the Refresh Device List button. A Warning screen will appear asking you to confirm that you want Torq to scan for the missing MIDI Device. Read the screen very carefully, then click Yes if you still want to refresh the device list. Once the process has completed, and your device appears, click Next.

Setup Assistant - Refresh Device List Warning

Torq preselects the most common location for your music folder based on your operating system. If the folder path displayed on the Music Library Setup screen is correct, click Next.
14

If the preselected location is incorrect, click the Browse button to the left of the folder path and navigate to the proper location on your system. Once you have found the folder, click on it once, then click Open (Mac) or OK (Windows). When that window closes, click Next on the Music Library Setup screen.

Setup Assistant - Music Library Setup

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If you have iTunes installed on your computer, Torq will preselect the default location of your iTunes library based on your operating system. If the folder path displayed on the iTunes Library Setup screen is correct, click Next.
15

If the preselected location is incorrect, click the Browse button to the left of the folder path and navigate to the proper location on your system. Once you have found the folder, click on it once, then click Open (Mac) or OK (Windows). When that window closes, click Next on the iTunes Library Setup screen.

Setup Assistant - iTunes Library Setup


16 Review the information displayed on the Summary screen, then click Next if all the information listed is correct.

If any of the information is incorrect, click Previous to go back to the appropriate page, or click the Gear icon to open the Torq Preferences (see Torq Preferences on page 101) to change the settings.

Setup Assistant - Summary

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17

Click Finish on the Enjoy screen.

Setup Assistant - Music Library Setup

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Chapter 4: Accessing Your Music

This chapter covers locating and organizing your music using the Browser and Database, as well as creating Playlists which let you quickly access and load songs onto any of the four Decks during your performances.

The Browser

Torq Browser

The Browser is located in the lower section of the Torq interface. The first column on the left of the Browser is the Index, which is used for navigating your system when locating and loading songs onto the decks. The Index contains folder headings for Snapshots, Database, and Files. The Files category contains all internal and connected external hard drives (such as C: or Macintosh HD) and CDs in your computers optical drive. The other standard headings are for your local Music folder (Music on Mac and My Music in Windows), the Desktop, iTunes, Crates, Playlists and any connected media players such as an iPod. Clicking any of the headings will display its contents in the File List on the right side of the Browsers. Clicking the plus (+) sign to the left of any heading reveals the subfolders below it, and the plus sign changes to a minus (-) sign. Clicking the minus sign to the left of any folder hide its subfolders. Clicking on a folder that containing compatible audio files (.aif, wav, or mp3) displays the songs in the File List on the right hand side of the Browser. However the File List will be empty if Torq cannot identify any playable files within a folder. Once you have located a song you can either preview it in your headphones before using it in a mix, or you can load it onto a deck.
Torq offers a number of useful preset Key Commands for working within the Browser. These can be found in Appendix A, listed under Browser Commands on page 152. Refer to File List on page 31, for more information about the File List features including Song Preview.

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Snapshots
Creating Snapshots lets you save multiple movements, such as button presses and knob adjustments, into a macro that can be triggered by a single keystroke. Torq manages a collection of Snapshots which can be recalled interchangeably, even in rapid succession. Snapshots can even be layered together to create massive changes in your mix.
Refer to Chapter 10, Snapshots for more information about creating and using Snapshots

Database

Database

The Database is a collection of folders located throughout your computer system (including external drives). This is feature lets you quickly and efficiently locate and organize your music collection. Once a folder is added to the Database, the songs it contains will be listed in the File List whenever you click on the Database heading. If you have multiple folders assigned to the Database, all the files in all folders will be listed simultaneously in the File List. Therefore, to use the Database efficiently, youll only want to assign folders that contain music youd like to spin.

Adding Folders to Database


To add a music folder to the Database:
1 2 3 4

Locate the folder you want to add to the Database. Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the folder. Choose Add to database from the pop-up menu.

The folder will then be assigned to the Database (you can click the + in front of Database to see this new folder listed beneath it).
You can stop this process at any time while it is running by right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the folder, and choosing Stop Addition to DB.

Now, when you click on Database, the contents of the folder you just assigned will be listed in the File List.

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Adding Multiple Folders


You may find that one folder will contain many folders that youd like to add to the Database. A great example of this is when your music is automatically sorted by a program like Apple iTunes. Typically, there will be a folder for each artist in your collection, and each of these folders will contain individual folders for each album by that artist. Therefore, if you want to add all the music by this particular artist to the Database, you actually need to add all of the individual album folders.
To add folders, including their subfolders, to the Database:
1

Locate the folder containing the sub-folders you want to add.

2 Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the folder and select Add folder to Database Recursively. Torq will automatically add the folder, along with all its sub-folders, to the Database.

You can stop this process at any time while it is running by right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the folder, and choosing Stop Addition to DB.

Adding Folders from Your OS


If youd prefer, you can add folders to the Database by dragging them from your operating system into the Torq Browser. You can do this using either Explorer for Windows or Finder for Mac.
To add folders from your OS:
1 2 3 4

Find your desired folders using the tools of your operating system (Explorer or Finder). Click and drag the folder from the operating system onto the Database. Release the mouse button and the folder will be added to the Database.

You can also include the subfolders by holding the Ctrl key (Alt key on Mac) while dragging the folder into the Database.

Searching Specific Database Folders


Clicking on the Database heading will display every song contained in the Database in the File List to the right of the Index.
If you would like to confine your search to only a particular folder within the Database:
1

Click the (+) in front of the Database heading. The list will expand to show all of the folders contained in the Database.

Click on one of the folders. The File List will be updated to only show the songs contained in that specific folder.

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Removing Folders from Database


There are two ways to remove folders from the Database. You can either search through the folders currently listed within the Database and remove them, or you can locate the original folders on your hard drives to remove them.
To remove folders directly from the Database:
1 2

Click the plus sign next to the Database. This will drop down a list of all folders assigned to the Database. When you have found the folder you want to delete, right-click it.

3 Choose Remove from the pop-up menu. The folder will then be removed from the Database while the original audio files will still remain on your hard drives.

To remove folders from the Browser:


1 2 3

Go to the Files listing in within the Index and locate the original folder on your computer. Right-click the folder.

Click Remove to remove this folder only. If the folder contains sub-folders that are part of the Database, they will remain in the Database. To remove the folder and all its subfolders, click Remove from Database Recursively.

Files (Hard Drives and CDs)


Torq can also search any internal or external hard drive on your computer including any CDs found in the optical drive. Clicking the plus sign (+)to the left of the Files category reveals a listing of all drives and CDs on the system. Clicking the plus sign (+) to the left of a drive or any or its subfolders reveals its contents immediately below it. When you click on a subfolder containing audio files (.mp3, .wav, or .aif), the file list on the right side of the Browser window. You can explore the contains and add folders from any drive to the Database using the methods described earlier.

Crates
The Crates feature lets you manually create collections of song to use in your mixes, in a similar way to how a DJ would select vinyl records or CDs to take out to a performance.

Creating New Crates


To create a new Crate:
1

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the Crates heading in the Index and choose Create Crate from the pop-up menu. A new Crate called Empty Crate will appear below the Crates heading.

2 3

If there is already an Empty Crate in the list, a number will be appended to the name to differentiate it from the other(s). For example Empty Crate (1).

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Renaming a Crate
To create a new Crate:
1 2

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on a Crate in the Index and choose Rename from the pop-up menu. Enter a new name for the Crate.

Adding Songs to Crates


Torq give you the choice of either adding songs to an existing Crate, or adding them to a new, previously non-existent Crate.
To add songs to an existing Crate:
1 2

Navigate to the folder containing the song or multiple songs you want to add. Click the song or multiple songs you want to add.
You can use the usual methods of selecting multiple songs provided by your operating system.

3 4 5

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the song or any of the multiple songs that are highlighted. Choose Add to Crates from the pop-up menu. Choose the name of an existing crate.

The song or multiple songs are be added to the Crate, and will be visible when it is accessed.
To add songs to a new Crate:
1 2

Navigate to the folder containing the song, or multiple songs you want to add. Click the song, or multiple songs you want to add.
You can use the usual methods of selecting multiple songs provided by your operating system.

3 4

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the song or any of the multiple songs that are highlighted. Choose * Add to new crate from the pop-up menu.

A Crate called New Crate is created containing the song or songs, and its name will be highlighted allowing you to rename it.

Removing Songs from a Crate


To remove songs from a Playlist:
1

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the song, or multiple songs you wish to delete.
You can use the usual methods of selecting multiple songs provided by your operating system.

2 3

Select Remove file(s) from the pop-up menu. Torq will remove the song from the Crate, but it will not be deleted from your computer.

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Reordering Songs in a Crate


The change the order in which your songs are appear in a Crate:
1 2

Click and drag the song up or down in the list.

If you drag the song on top of another existing song, releasing the mouse button will cause the song to be inserted above the song in the Crate.

Deleting a Crate
To delete a Create:
1 2

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the Crate and choose Remove from the pop-up menu. The Crate will be removed from the Crates list.
If the Crate you are deleting contains songs, and also resides inside another Crate (as a sub-crate), a dialog box will appear asking if you want to move the songs in the sub-crate into the parent crate. You choices are Yes, No, or Cancel.

Duplicating a Crate
If you want to create a new Crate based on an existing Crate, you can create duplicate, and then add songs to the new one if you want to.
To duplicate a Crate:
1

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the Playlist you would like to duplicate and choose Duplicate from the pop-up menu. A duplicate of the selected playlist will be created and displayed underneath it.

2 3

A number will be added to the name of the Playlist to differentiate it from the original. For example Crate 1. This duplicate Crate can be renamed using the method described above.

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Playlists

Playlists

While many DJ's will perform off-the-cuff without any previous rehearsal or forethought, other DJ's will pre-program their sets, either due to the complexity of the set, or simply as a method for remembering vital songs (this can be helpful for wedding or party DJ's who take requests). Torq features Playlists to help you organize and store lists of songs. You can create and manage multiple Playlists, each with as many songs as you like. Each Playlist can then be edited by adding or deleting tracks, or by rearranging their order within the Playlist.

Creating New Playlists


To create a new Playlist:
1

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the Playlists heading in the Browser and choose New Playlist from the pop-up menu. A new Playlist titled Empty Playlist will appear below the Playlist heading (click the plus sign in front of Playlists in order to see this list).

If there is already an Empty Playlist in the list, a number will be appended to the name to differentiate it from the other(s), i.e. Empty Playlist 1.

Rename Playlist
1

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on your desired Playlist and choose Rename Playlist from the pop-up menu. Type in the new name you would like to give the Playlist and hit the Enter key on your computer keyboard. The Playlist will display its new name.

2 3

Deleting a Playlist
1 2

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the Playlist and choose Remove from the pop-up menu.

The Playlist will be removed from the list in Torq. It will still be on your computer, however, stored in the Deleted Playlists folder.

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Duplicating a Playlist
If you like a particular Playlist and would like to build a new one based upon it, you can duplicate (or copy) it for future modification.
To duplicate a Playlist:
1 Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the Playlist you would like to duplicate and choose Duplicate Playlist from the pop-up menu. 2

A duplicate of the selected playlist will be created and displayed underneath it.

3 A number will be added to the name of the Playlist to differentiate it from the original. Of course, you can rename this Playlist using the method described above.

Adding Songs to a Playlist


1 2 3 4

Once you have created and selected a Playlist, youll begin adding files to it using the following procedure: Using the Browser or Database, locate the song (or songs) youd like to add to the Playlist. Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the song name(s) and select Add to Playlist from the pop-up menu. The song(s) will be added to the bottom of the Playlist.

Removing Songs from a Playlist


You can remove songs from a Playlist as follows:
1 2 3

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the song in the Playlist you wish to delete. Select Remove from Playlist from the pop-up menu.

Torq will remove the song from the Playlist, but the song will remain in the Torq Database (it will not be deleted from your computer).

Reordering Songs in a Playlist


The order in which your songs are displayed in the Playlist can be changed by doing the following:
1 2

Click and drag the song up or down in the list.

If you drag the song on top of another existing song, releasing the mouse button will cause the song to be inserted above the song in the list.

Activating a Playlist
When you select a Playlist, Torq runs a quick scan of your computers drives to ensure all the audio files referenced by the Playlist are present on the computer. If Torq cannot locate one or more of the songs from the Playlist (possibly because the drive containing the song is no longer connected to the computer, or the source file has been deleted), a pop-up dialog will appear with the following message: Cannot find one or more of the files used in this Playlist. What would you like to do? You will then have a choice of clicking one of the following buttons:

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Ignore

Clicking this button will allow the Playlist to load, however all missing songs will be displayed in red in the File List window.
Auto-scan

Clicking this button will cause Torq to search all hard drives connected to your computer in an attempt to find the missing file(s). If a file is found with the same name but in a different location, another dialog box will appear with the following message: Would you like to use this file for [name of missing file]? By choosing Yes, Torq will use the file and automatically assume that the rest of the missing files will also be in this same folder. Once found, these files will automatically be loaded. If the other missing files are not in this location, Torq will continue searching the computer until another file is found. Choosing No will allow the search to continue for another possible file in a different location. If the search completes without finding the proper file, a dialog box will appear with the following message: Cannot find [name of missing file]. When you click OK Torq will display the file in red in the File List, indicating that the song cannot be played. If there are other files to search for, the search process will continue.
Manual

Clicking this button will open a standard operating system dialog box that will allow you to manually search for the audio file on your hard drive(s). Although you are searching for a specific missing file, it is possible to select any audio file to be used in its place. If you choose a file that is different than the missing file shown in the File List, the ID3 tag info for the new file will be shown (in the Playlist) in place of the original song.

Saving a Playlist
All playlists created using Torq are automatically saved to your local hard drive. These playlists can be opened by any application that supports the .m3u playlist format.
Torq playlist location, Windows XP:

C:\Documents and Settings\[username]\Application Data\M-Audio\Torq\Playlists


Torq playlist location, Windows Vista:

C:\Users\[username]\AppData\Roaming\M-Audio\Torq\Playlists
Torq playlist location, Mac:

~/Library/Application Support/M-Audio/Torq/Playlists
In Windows Vista and Windows XP systems, the playlists are located within hidden folders. You will need to change your Folder Options > View settings to make these hidden folders visible before you can access the playlist files.

Windows XP From My Computer click on the Tools menu, select Folder Options, click on the View tab and

then select Show hidden files and folders from the list of options.
Windows Vista From the Windows Control Panel, select Appearance and Personalization, Folder Options, click on the View tab and then select Show hidden files and folders.

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Loading a Playlist
Torq can import Playlists created by other programs if they conform to the .m3u file format.
To load one of these Playlists:
1 2 3

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the Playlists heading in the Browser Index. Select Load Playlist from the pop-up menu. A standard dialog box will open, allowing you to locate and select a Playlist.

4 Once selected, the Playlist will be imported into Torq and Torq will begin checking for the necessary files (explained above).

Session Playlist

Session Playlists

The Session Playlist is an automatic Playlist that keeps track of every song youve played since you launched Torq. This is handy when you need to see if youve played a song already, or if you need to reference a list of what you played at a previous gig. An empty Session Playlist is created each time you launch Torq. It is named Session Playlist YY-MM-DD where YY-MM-DD represents the year, month, and day of the Playlist, respectively. Each song you load onto a Deck will automatically be added to the bottom of the Session Playlist. If a Playlist already exists with the current date, a number will be appended to differentiate it. Torq will only store Session Playlists for the last 30 days. Any Session Playlists that are older than 30 days will be automatically deleted in order to keep your hard drive from becoming overpopulated with Playlists.

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Rename the Session Playlist


If you find that youd like to permanently keep a Session Playlist, all you have to do is rename it. Once renamed, the Playlist will be moved from the pool of Session Playlists and be kept with your normal Playlists.
To do this:
1 2 3

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) on the Session Playlist and choose Rename from the pop-up menu. Type in a new name for the Playlist and press Enter.

The Playlist will be saved. If you renamed the current Session Playlist, a new Session Playlist will be created that will track all songs played from that point onward.

Deleting Session Playlists


You can delete the Session Playlists using the same method for deleting standard Playlists. If you delete the current Session Playlist, a new one will be created that will track all songs played from that point forward.

iPods
Torq also allows direct access to the contents of any connected iPod (excluding the iPod Shuffle, iPod touch, and iPhone). When an iPod is connected, it will be listed in the Browser window.

iPod Index Listing

Like the iTunes Library, the contents of an iPod can be searched using the Library or Playlist headings. You can also include the contents of the iPod in the Database by doing the following:
1 2 3 4

Open the Preferences. Click on the Behavior tab. Next to Search iPod With Database, select Yes. Close the Preferences.

Torq will now include the songs from the iPod the next time you click the Database heading. When using an iPod with a large song collection, it may take Torq a moment to download the entire music list the first time the device is accessed.
Torq streams music directly from the iPod. Do not disconnect the iPod until you have finished playing music from it. Torq 2.0 User Guide 30 Chapter 4: Accessing Your Music

File List
The window to the right of the Browser pane is called the File List. If you have selected a source in the Browser that contains music (such as the Database or an individual folder), the songs contained therein will be listed here. The File List not only shows you the name of the song, but also shows the artist name, album name, track number, genre, and other fields contained within the songs ID3 tag. These additional categories can help you find song with greater efficiency.
While ID3 tags will support storage of the information listed above, it is common to find music files with some (if not all) of the ID3 fields blank. In these instances you can manually fill in the missing information to aid future file searches.

Editing Fields
Torq will extract the relevant song information from the files ID3 tag in order to populate the fields of the File List as described above. You are free to edit the information shown in the File List simply by double-clicking a field, typing in new data and hitting Enter. Torq does not update the songs ID3 tag with your edits. Instead, your edited fields are stored in a special file with the same name as the song, but with the extension .tqd at the end. This is the Torq Data file. By saving your edits to the TQD file, Torq can save your changes much faster (changing an ID3 tag requires re-writing the entire audio file, something that could affect system performance during live use). Additionally, the audio file could become corrupted during the re-write process. So, Torq leaves your precious music files untouched by saving data to the TQD file.

Sorting the List


There are fourteen categories that can be displayed across the top of the File List window: Artist, Song, Album, Track # (Track Number), BPM (Beats Per Minute), Key, Genre, Length, Comment, File Type, Bitrate, Label, Year and Filename. These categories are taken from the ID3 tags of your music files or, in the case of song length and BPM, calculated as part of Torqs file analysis. An ID3 tag is a standard format for storing additional information within a music file. You can resize the width of any of these columns simply by clicking and dragging left and right on any of the vertical lines separating the columns. Additionally, you can re-order the arrangement of the columns by clicking and dragging the column name to a new position (the column name will turn white while doing this). If you wish, you can also hide certain columns from view by right-clicking on a category name and choosing which items to display from the pop-up menu. You can sort the contents of the File List by clicking on any one of the categories at the top of the window. For example, if you click the Album category, the File List will be sorted alphabetically (A to Z) by Album name. If you click Album again, the order will be reversed (Z to A). You could also click on the BPM column to sort all your songs by their BPM. This can be very useful when looking for songs of a similar BPM. Click the Reset button to return to the default sort order.
The Filename column is available in the event that the music youre trying to use does not contain an ID3 tag (such as AIFF and WAV formats) or does not have the proper text filled in. Here, the actual name of the file (as it exists on your hard drive) will be shown.

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Searching the List


The simplest method for searching is to type a keyword (or keywords) into the Search field above the Database/Browser.
To search the list:
1 2

Click the Database heading in the Browser pane to select it.

Click in the Search field and type in your search term(s). Terms can include an artists name, a song title, BPM, etc.
3

As soon as you start typing, Torq will begin searching the Database for the letters you have typed. There is no need to hit the Enter key on your keyboard. When you stop typing, youll have a list of all files that contain the search term in one of its fields.

For example, if you type the word love into the search field, Torq could return the following results:
Artist Deee-Lite Jennifer Love Hewitt Love and Rockets Madonna Sade Song Power of Love Cant Stand in the Way of Love Angels and Devils Id Rather Be Your Lover Flow Album World Clique Lets Go Bang Express Bedtime Stories Lovers Rock

Search Categories
As you can see, the above search workedit found songs that contained the word love in any category. However, this may not be quite what you were looking for. You may have actually wanted files with love in the songs name only. To search for such titles, youll need to confine the scope of the search to the Song category only.
To confine a search to a particular category:
1 2

Hold down the SHIFT key and click a category name. The category name will turn red.

Torq will refine its search results and only show songs that contain your search term within the selected field.
3 You can hold SHIFT and click additional categories if you wish (i.e. you can select Song and Album simultaneously). 4

SHIFT-clicking a selected category will de-select it.

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Using our example above, confining the search to the Song category would yield the following results:
Artist Deee-Lite Jennifer Love Hewitt Madonna Song Power of Love Cant Stand in the Way of Love Id Rather Be Your Lover Album World Clique Lets Go Bang Bedtime Stories

Now, only the songs with love in their titles are shown.

Filter Field
Torq offers another method for refining your searches by means of the Ignore field. Here, youll enter terms that you want Torq to omit from the search results. The Ignore command will only be applied to the currently selected categories (explained above).
To omit terms from the search results:
1 2 3

Click to put a cursor in the Ignore Field. Type in the term you would like to filter out of the search.

Torq will display only the songs that contain the information required in the Search field while omitting the songs that fit the criteria of the Ignore field. Again, using the example above, entering the term Lover into the Ignore field will return the following list:
Artist Deee-Lite Jennifer Love Hewitt Song Power of Love Cant Stand in the Way of Love Album World Clique Lets Go Bang

Youll see that, as a result, Id Rather Be Your Lover has been removed from the list.
References to artists and bands is for informational purposes only and does not imply an endorsement or sponsorship of Avid by such artists or bands.

Song Preview
Once you have located and clicked on a song in the File List, it can be previewed within the browser by pressing the Preview button (headphone icon) on the left end of Browser search bar. Pressing this button plays the song sending the audio signal through the PFL/Headphone cue to your headphones.
Refer to PFL/Headphone Cue on page 69 for more information about the PFL/Headphone Cue.

Clear Button
When you are done with your search and are ready to begin a new one, press the Clear button. This will clear the Search and Ignore fields as well as deselect any categories that had been previously selected.

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Chapter 5: The Decks

The Decks play the music that you load onto them to mix and effect using all the tools in Torq. Traditionally, a DJs decks are turntables or CD players. With this in mind, the four Decks in Torq have been designed to emulate turntables and CD players, as well as offering a special hybrid mode only possible with software. Each of the four Decks has various functions for controlling playback of the music in great detail. This includes changing the speed and/or key of the song, looping sections of audio, and jumping to other locations within a song. Using these controls as described below, you can match tempos of various songs during a mix, or re-arrange a song.
Torq offers a number of useful preset Key Commands for working within the Deck. These can be found in Appendix A, listed under Deck Commands on page 153.

Torq in Four Deck Mode

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Four Deck Mode vs. Two Deck Mode

Torq in Two Deck Mode

Torq 2.0 gives you the option of working in either Four Deck Mode (Decks A, B, C, and D), or Two Deck Mode (Decks B and C). Switching Torq from Two Deck to Four deck Mode is achieved by clicking the Torq Mode button located in the Toolbar. When you switch to Two Deck Mode the number 4 in the icon will change to a number 2.

Torq Mode Button

Although the functionality is the same, there are slight differences in how certain features are accessed. Where applicable this user guide will make note of these differences.
Placing your mouse cursor over the various on-screen controls will display their names in the bottom edge of the Torq interface. You can also user your mouse wheel to control the on-screen knobs and sliders.

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Deck Switch
The Deck Switch feature offers a set of key commands for assigning any deck to either side of your two-deck hardware. This lets you bring an assigned deck into focus as the Target Deck to be controlled by your hardware. This capability also extends to situations where you want or need to target and control any of the decks with a single hardware deck, or with your computer keyboard and mouse. Once a deck has been selected, Torq lets you access and control numerous other functions on a per Deck basis, using additional key commands listed in Appendix A under Deck Commands on page 153. When the Highlight Deck Assignment option is set to Yes (default) on the GUI page of the Torq Preferences, the edge of currently targeted decks will be highlighted with a colored rectangle. Torq Decks assigned to the left side of your controller are highlighted in green, while Decks assigned to the right side are highlighted in purple. If a deck is highlighted in red, it will be controlled by both sides of your hardware.
Refer to Chapter 12, Torq Preferences for more information about the available Torq preference settings.

The the table below lists key commands for assigning the Decks to either side of an M-Audio Xponent DJ Control surface. However it is also important to remember that commands also bring the decks into focus when using your mouse and keyboard to control Torq. If you are using qualified third-party hardware, refer to the its documentation.
Mac users should go into the Keyboard Preferences in Mac OS X, and change the following options before using Torq key commands: On the Keyboard page, Enable Use all F1, F2, etc. keys as standard function keys. On the Keyboard Shortcuts page under Dashboard & Dock, disable Dashboard (F12). Then disable Expos under Expos & Spaces.

Deck Assignment/Selection Left Xponent side controls Deck A Left Xponent side controls Deck B Left Xponent side controls Deck C Left Xponent side controls Deck D Right Xponent side controls Deck A Right Xponent side controls Deck B Right Xponent side controls Deck C Right Xponent side controls Deck D

Mac Key F5 F6 F7 F8 F9 F10 F11 F12

Windows Key F5 F6 F7 F8 F9 F10 F11 F12

The corresponding Function keys listed above for selecting Decks B and C are the same in both Four Deck and Two Deck modes.

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Deck Assignment
The following instructions explain how to assign Torq Decks to either side of your hardware controller. Again, this feature is designed to let you assign any deck to either side of your controller. Although the table above and the following example refers to the M-Audio Xponent DJ Controller, these steps also apply to qualified third-party hardware. Refer your third-party documentation for additional manufacturer specific information.
To assign a Torq Deck to the left side of your controller:
1 2

Choose a deck to assign to the left side of your Xponent. For example, Deck C. Press the corresponding Function key for the Deck. For example F7.

A green rectangle appears around the edge of Deck C, indicating that it is the Target Deck for the left side of your Xponent. Moving or pressing a slider, knob or button on the left side of your hardware controls its corresponding on-screen Torq function or parameter.
To assign a Torq Deck to the right side of your controller:
1 2

Choose a deck to assign to the right side of your Xponent. For example, Deck D. Press the corresponding Function key for the Deck. For example F12.

A purple rectangle appears around the edge of Deck D, indicating that it is the Target Deck for the right side of your Xponent. Moving or pressing a slider, knob or button on your hardware controls its corresponding on-screen Torq function or parameter.

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Loading Songs onto the Decks


Torq lets you choose the following methods for loading a song from the File List onto any of the Decks

Drag and Drop to a Deck


To drag and drop a song to a deck:
1 2 3

Click and hold on the desired song in the File List. It will become highlighted. While continuing to hold the mouse button, drag the song to any of the Decks. Once the song is over a Deck, release the mouse button and the track will load.

Drag and Drop to the Waveform Display.

Four Deck Mode Waveform Display

Songs can also be loaded onto a deck by dragging it to the Waveform Display which is located above the Mixer. In Four Deck Mode, dragging a song to the top of the Waveform Display loads it onto Deck A, while dragging it to the upper middle loads it onto Deck B. Dragging it to the lower end of the display loads it onto Deck D, while dragging it to the lower middle of the display loads it onto Deck C.

Two Deck Mode Waveform Display

In Two Deck mode, dragging a songs to the top half of the Waveform Display loads it onto Deck B, and dragging it the lower half loads Deck C.
Refer to Chapter 6, Waveform Display for more information about the Waveform Display.

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Using the Function Keys


To load a deck using the Function Keys:
1 2

Click on the desired song in the File List. Press one of the following: F1 (for Deck A), F2 (for Deck B), F3 (for Deck C), or F4 (for Deck D).
In Two Deck Mode the key assignments for Decks B and C are the same as in Four Deck Mode. When using a Mac laptop, you may need to hold the Fn key while pressing the Torq function keys in order for these features to work.

Copying Songs to Other Decks (Make Double)

Make Double Button

Pressing the Make Double button lets you copy a song including all Markers such as Loop Points, Cues, and Tempo Anchors to another Deck.
For more information about Cues, Loops, and Tempo Anchors refer to Markers on page 43. Refer to Tempo Anchors on page 62 for more information about Tempo Anchors.

To copy a song to another deck:


1 2 3 4

Load a song onto a deck. For example, Deck A. Choose a destination Deck. For example Deck D. Choose Deck A from the dropdown menu of the destination deck. Click the Make Double button on destination Deck.

The destination Deck, in this case Deck D, will contain a copy of song on Deck A.

Unloading Songs from the Decks


To unload a song from a Deck, hold Shift while pressing F1 (for Deck A), F2 (for Deck B), F3 (for Deck C), or F4 (for Deck D).
In Two Deck Mode the key assignments for Decks B and C are the same as in Four Deck Mode.

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Displays
Each Deck has various informational displays on the interface. These are mostly for relaying information to you, such as which song is playing, how long its been playing, and how much time is remaining.

Song Name
The top area of each Deck displays the title of the song that was loaded onto it. This is the same as the title listed under the song column heading in the File List. If there is no title listed in the File List, the name of the actual file will be shown instead.

Artist Name
Below the Song Name is the Artist Name. Like the Song Name, this field will be empty if there is no entry in the Artist column of the File List.

Time Elapsed
The time display on the left side of the deck under the Artist Name shows the current location of the song, marked by the yellow Now Line in the Overview Waveform Display (see Overview Waveform on page 40). This is expressed in hours/ minutes/seconds/frames (at 30 fps). When the Current Position Marker is at the beginning of the song, the Time Elapsed will be 0:0:0.0.

Time Remaining
The field to the right of the Time Elapsed indicates how much time is left before the song ends. At the beginning of the song, the Time Remaining will be the same as the entire length of the song and decrease as the song progresses.
The Overview Waveform and Waveform Display will flash red when there is less than 30 seconds remaining in a song.

Overview Waveform
Each Deck includes an Overview Waveform display which shows a miniaturized version of the songs waveform in its entirety. This display serves several purposes: It allows you to see where the breaks and builds are in a song before they happen. The yellow Now Line indicates your current location within the song. White QuickCue points (see QuickCue on page 43)and a white bar representing Tempo Anchors (see Tempo Anchors on page 62) will be superimposed over this waveform. You can click anywhere in this waveform and playback will jump to that location.

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Transport Controls
The Transport buttons let you control various aspects of song playback as described below.

Advance

Advance Buttons

Sometimes when mixing two songs together, you may find that the beats are aligned with each other, yet the two songs are still out of phase. This is most obvious when one song is offset by one beat, causing the snare drums of the tracks to be out of alignment. The Advance buttons can be used to correct this. Pressing these buttons will make the Current Song Position jump forward or back by one beat-length. Holding down the Shift key and clicking one of the Advance buttons moves the Phase Grid an entire beat left or right. This is a quick way to fix the Phase Grid if it happens to be aligned to the beats but has the downbeat in the wrong location.
Refer to Phase Grid Manipulations on page 107 for more information about moving the Phase Grid.

If you have the Sync Mode set to Bar in the Toolbar or Torq Preferences (Synq Reference), the Offset buttons will have no effect when the Decks Sync button is on. This is because Torq will counteract a one-beat offset when set to Bar mode. If you want to offset the music by one beat when Sync is on, youll need to offset the Phase Grid as explained in Phase Grid Manipulations on page 107 or switch the Synq Reference to Beat by clicking the Synq Reference Button in the Torq Toolbar. Refer to Synq Reference on page 129 for more information about Synq Reference.

Seek

Seek Buttons

The Seek buttons are used to Fast forward or rewind through the song, allowing you to find certain points (or beats) within the track from which you can start playing. If you click briefly on the Forward or Backward buttons, the music will jump only slightly in that direction. If you click and hold one of these buttons, Torq will scroll through the song and stop when you release the it. To jump to either the beginning or end of the song, hold the Shift key while clicking a Seek buttons.

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Cue

Cue Button

The Cue button will establish a primary Cue Point within a song. A Cue Point is a reference position within the track that you can jump to instantly, rather than having to seek through the track to find it. Typically, a DJ will set the Cue Point where the beat begins in a song. When a song is first loaded onto a Deck this Cue Point appears as a red line at the beginning of the song (within the Waveform Display. The Cue button works in the following manner: If you hold SHIFT and press Cue, a Cue Point will be placed at the current location, even if the song is already playing. If a song is playing, pressing the Cue button will make the song jump to the Cue Point and pause there. If Cue is pressed and held again, the music will begin playing from the Cue Point. The music will stop playing when the Cue button is released and the song will jump back to the Cue Point. If a song is paused in a location different from the Cue Point, pressing the Cue button will set the Cue Point to the current location. If you hold Cue and press the Play/Pause button, the music will continue to play after you release both buttons.

Play/Pause

Play/Pause Button

Clicking the Play/Pause button starts and stops playback.


When you pause the music, the song will not return to the beginningit will stay in the same location as when you stopped it. If you want to return to the beginning, use the Seek buttons.

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Markers
Quantize Loop and QuickCue Points Button

Quantize Loop and QuickCue Points Button

Clicking the Quantize Loop and QuickCue Points button in the Torq Toolbar quantizes the position of QuickCues and Loop Points (see Loop on page 45) to the nearest 16th note. You can also set this behavior as a default, by changing the Quantize Cue and Loop Points setting in the Behavior Preferences to Yes (see Quantize Cue and Loop Points on page 132).
Enabling Quantize does not change the positions of QuickCues or Loop points that are already set in a song. It only controls the creation of new QuickCues and Loops.

QuickCue
In addition to the primary Cue Point described above, Torq allows you to set up to five QuickCue Points in a song that are assigned to the QuickCue buttons below the Overview Waveform display. These buttons can then be used to quickly jump between the various QuickCue points. Torq will save the locations of the five QuickCue points with each song so they will be available the next time you play the song.

Setting QuickCues
There are a few different ways to set QuickCue Points: Click the Set button, then click one of the four QuickCue buttons. A QuickCue Point is set at the current location and visible in the Overview Waveform display. This can be done while a Deck is playing or paused. or Hold the Shift key while clicking one of the QuickCue buttons. A QuickCue Point is set to the Now Line and is visible in the Overview Waveform display. This can be done while a Deck is playing or paused.
If Quantize is switched on in Torqs Toolbar, new QuickCue points will be aligned to the nearest 16th-note in a song. If you try to assign a QuickCue to a button that is already set to a particular location, the old QuickCue location will be overwritten in favor of the new one.

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Playing QuickCues
Once youve set a couple QuickCue Points, all you have to do is click on the desired QuickCue button and the Deck will immediately jump to that location and begin playing. If you set your QuickCue Points at key positions within the song, you can immediately jump to different sections on-the-fly, such as jumping ahead to a chorus or back to the intro.
While a song is playing, you can use CTRTL + QuickCue Button to jump to a QuickCue within the track without playing the selected cue. If you reposition playback using one of the QuickCue buttons while Looping is activated, playback will jump to the new location. Torq automatically places the Loop In Marker at the new location and places the Loop Out Marker in a position which maintains the same loop length.

Clearing QuickCues
If youd like to clear all of the QuickCues in a song, click the Clear button.

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Loop
Torq offers you two different ways to loop audio. You can specify the start and end points of the loop manually, or you can capture loops of a specific length using the QuickLoop buttons. Furthermore, Torq will help you make the perfect loop every time by automatically matching your loop points to the tempo of the song.

Loop In/Out
Looping an entire song doesnt have much benefit for a DJ, so Torq allows you to move the Loop Markers by using the Loop In and Loop Out buttons:
To move loop markers in real time:

Load a song onto a Deck and press Play. When playback reaches the beginning of the section you want to loop, click the Loop In button. This places a bright yellow Loop In Marker in the Overview Waveform for the deck, and at the orange Now Line in the Waveform Display above the Mixer. If the Quantize button is active, the Loop In marker will snap to the beginning of the nearest 16th-note in the songs waveform. When playback reaches the end of the section you want to loop, click the Loop Out button. This will place a Loop Out Marker at the Now Line, which will also snap to the nearest 16th-note. At the same time, the Loop On/Off button will automatically be activated causing playback to jump back to the Loop In Marker. The music will now loop between these two points indefinitely. When you have finished looping this section of the song, you can click the Loop On/Off button to turn it off. Now, when playback reaches the Loop Out Marker, it will simply pass it and continue playing the rest of the song.
If you reposition playback using one of the QuickCue buttons while Looping is activated, playback will jump to the new location. Torq automatically places the Loop In Marker at the new location and places the Loop Out Marker in a position which maintains the same loop length.

Loop Out Behavior


By default, Torq places the Loop Out marker at a position that is the closest multiple of 2 in length from the Loop In marker. In other words, Torq will only allow you to make loops with the lengths of 1 beat, 2 beats, 4 beats (1 bar), 2 bars, 4 bars, 16 bars, etc. This makes it easier to achieve even loops without having to press the Loop Out button with 16th-note accuracy. Torq has a second Loop Out mode that always quantizes the Loop Out marker positions to the nearest 16th note:
To change the Loop Out Behavior:
1 2

Open Torqs Preferences and click on the Behavior Tab. Switch the Loop Out mode from Smart to 16thand close the preferences.

Now the Loop Out marker will be quantized, and snap to a location that is the nearest 16th-note length from the position of the Loop In marker. However, this requires that you press the Loop Out marker within a 16th-note of where you want the loop to end.

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Loop On/Off
The Loop button will indicate whether Torq is looping audio or not. Whenever this button is illuminated, Torq will be looping something, whether triggered with one of the QuickLoop buttons or set manually with the Loop In and Loop Out buttons. Click this button to toggle the current selected loop.

QuickLoop
More often than not, a DJ will loop audio that is an even number of beats or bars. For example, a single bar (four beats) or two bars (eight beats), or micro-loops of only one or two beats. Instead of having to quickly press the Loop In and Loop Out buttons to create loops of these lengths, Torq provides one-button access to these loops via the QuickLoop buttons.
Using QuickLoops

The QuickLoop buttons allow you to instantly loop a section of a song by a preset length. By default, each of the four buttons represents a different bar length; one bar, two bars, four bars, and eight bars. Simply press one of these buttons at the beginning of the section you want to loop and Torq will automatically place the Loop In and Loop Out Markers in the appropriate locations:
To automatically loop a section:
1 2

Load a song into a Deck and press play.

Press the QuickLoop button labeled 1. The Loop button will be switched on and the Loop In Marker will immediately be placed at the Now Line, with a corresponding Loop Out Marker placed exactly one bar later and the song will begin looping a perfect bar.
3

To turn the loop OFF, click the Loop button. Playback will now proceed beyond the Loop Out Marker.

Doubling the Length of a QuickLoop

Looking at the example above, once the one bar loop has been set, Torq lets you double its length by holding down the Shift key and pressing the 1 QuickLoop button. If needed you can increase the length up to four bars. In other word, the first time you double the one bar loop it will increase to two bars, and the second double will double the resulting two bar loop to four bars.
Pre-Loop

You can also reverse the behavior of the QuickLoop buttons by holding Shift when you create a loop. If you do this, Torq will place the Loop Out marker at the current playback location and will set the Loop In marker at the indicated number of Bars or Beats (depending on the QuickLoop Size preference) before the playback location. Using this feature, you can loop sections of audio that just played. For example, to repeat the last 2 bars of music that played, hold Shift and press/click QuickLoop 2.

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QuickLoop Size Preference

As mentioned above, the default loop lengths for the four QuickLoop buttons are one bar, two bars, four bars, and eight bars. The QuickLoop Size preference allows you to change the QuickLoop buttons to beat values instead of bar values:
To set Quickloop to beat values:
1 2 3

Open the Torq Preferences menu and click on the Behavior tab. Click the arrow next to QuickLoop Size option and choose Beat from the drop-down list. Click the X to close the Preferences window.

Now, when you use the QuickLoop buttons as described above, youll find that they capture loops of one beat, two beats, four beats, and eight beats in size.
Changing QuickLoop Lengths

Along with being able to capture loops of a specific size, the QuickLoop buttons also allow you to change the size of the loops after they have been made. Torq has two methods for changing QuickLoop lengths which are selected from the Preferences:
To set the QuickLoop preference:
1 2

Open the Torq Preferences menu and click on the Behavior tab. Locate the QuickLoop Mode itemyoull see that it has two settings: Cut and Grow and Direct.

When this Cut and Grow is selected, each additional press of a QuickLoop button will cut the current loop length in half. For example, if you press QuickLoop 4, Torq will grab a 4 bar loop. Pressing QuickLoop 4 again will result in a 2 bar loop. Press it again and youll get a 1 bar loop. If you hold SHIFT while pressing the QuickLoop button, the loop will grow in sizedoubling in length with each press of the button. Direct mode resembles the behavior found on some DJ CD players. When selected, the QuickLoop buttons will become divisors once a loop has been captured. For example, pressing the QuickLoop 4 button will capture a 4 bar loop. Pressing QuickLoop 2 will now divide the loop length by 2 resulting in a 2-bar loop (4 bars / 2 = 2 bars). Pressing QuickLoop 4 will result in a 1-bar loop (4 bars / 4 = 1 bar). Pressing QuickLoop 1 will reset the loop back to its original length (4 bars / 1 = 4 bars).

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Control (Deck Mode)


In order for Torq to feel familiar to all types of DJ's, each Deck can be operated in one of four different modes, which are accessed via the Deck Mode pop-up menu.

Vinyl Mode
Vinyl Mode causes a Deck to behave as if it was a turntable. Pressing Play/Pause to pause playback will cause audio to stop, just like pressing stop on a turntable. Clicking and dragging on the Scrolling Waveform will have audible results, like scratching a record.
Try out Vinyl mode:
1

Click and hold the mouse on the waveform. Playback will stop, as if you have placed your hand on a record to stop it.

Continue holding the mouse button, then drag the mouse left and right. This will scrub, or scratch, the song. Using your mouse to control a waveform in this manner is known as Scratch via Waveform. Releasing the mouse button will cause the Deck to play the song back from the current location.

CDJ Mode
CDJ mode will make the Deck behave as if it was a CDJ player. Pressing Play/Pause to pause playback will cause the Deck to stop and begin repeating a small section of audio. The repeating section corresponds to the position where playback will resume when you press Play/Pause again. While the audio is repeating, you can click and drag on the Scrolling Waveform to move the start locationyoull hear the repeating audio slice change as you do this. Press the Cue button to set the Cue Point to this location and the repeating audio slice will stop. Clicking and dragging on the Scrolling Waveform while the Deck is playing will not stop audio. Instead, youll be able to drag left or right to offset the playback speed of the track. Controlling the waveform in this manner lets you to align the track against another Deck when beat-matching.
Switching to MIDI Platter Control Mode selects Vinyl Mode, while selecting CDJ Mode switches off MIDI Platter Control Mode. For more information about MIDI Platter Control Mode, refer to Chapter 15, MIDI Platter Control.

Try out CDJ mode:


1 2

Click and hold on the waveform. The music will continue to play.

While holding on the mouse button, drag the mouse left. The playback tempo will be momentarily increased, making the waveform scroll a little faster to the left.

3 Now hold and drag the mouse to the right. Playback will continue playing forward, but at a slightly slower tempo. In this instance the waveform scrolls right to left at a slower rate.

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Using your the mouse to control the waveform in this manner while aligning the song with another deck is called Nudge Via Waveform. During this process, the Phase Grids for each song will become closer in line with each other as the synchronization between them improves. As soon as you stop dragging, playback will return to its original tempo even if you are still holding the mouse button.

Hybrid Mode
Hybrid mode provides a blend of the CDJ and Vinyl control modes. Pressing Play/Pause to pause playback will cause audio to stop, just like in Vinyl mode. While paused, clicking and dragging on the Scrolling Waveform will have audible results, like scratching in Vinyl mode. When playback is active, clicking and dragging on the Scrolling Waveform will not stop audio. Instead, youll be able to drag left or right to offset the playback speed of the track like in CDJ mode. This will allow you to align the track against the other Deck when beat-matching.
Switching to MIDI Platter Control Mode also selects Vinyl Mode, while selecting Hybrid Mode switches off MIDI Platter Control Mode. For more information about MIDI Platter Control Mode, refer to Chapter 15, MIDI Platter Control.

Try out Hybrid mode:


1 2

Click and hold on the waveform. The music will continue to play.

While holding on the mouse button, drag the mouse left. The playback tempo will be momentarily increased, making the waveform scroll a little faster to the left.

Now hold and drag the mouse to the right. Playback will remain going forward, but the tempo will be slowed slightly, resulting in a waveform that still scrolls right to left, but at a slower rate.
3

Controlling the waveform in this manner while aligning the song with another deck is another example of Nudge Via Waveform. During this process, the Phase Grids for each song will become closer in line with each other as the synchronization between them improves. As soon as you stop dragging, playback will return to its original tempo even if you are still holding the mouse button.

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Control Inputs 1 Though 4


This option switches Torq to External Control Mode which lets you use the Torq Control Vinyl or Torq Control CD's, as well as other qualified hardware to provide the same method of DJing as traditional turntables and/or CD decks. Torq also allows you to use external MIDI hardware to control nearly any feature within the application. The Control Vinyl and Control CD system works by using vinyl records and compact discs imprinted with special control signals. Youll play these control signals on your turntables and/or CD players and feed that signal into any professional audio interface that has four inputs (with phono preamplifiers on each input if you are using turntables) such as the M-Audio Conectiv. Torq will listen to those audio signals and will use the encoded information to control the playback of the Decks.
For detailed information about the connection, configuration, and use of qualified external control surfaces with Torq, refer to External Control on page 139 and External Control Calibration on page 140. Additional information about the Torq Vinyl Control System can be found in Appendix B, Torq Vinyl Control System.

External Control
Pressing the External Control button located to the left of each Deck Mode drop down menu switches the deck to External Control Mode, which lets you control the desk using Control Vinyl or Control CDs as described above via Control Inputs 1 through 4. With this, the appearance of the play button will change, becoming two buttons. The top button, labelled ABS offers two different control modes, affecting the behavior of the Control Vinyl or Control CD and song playback. In its default state the ABS button switches the deck to Absolute Mode button (see Absolute Mode on page 141), while pressing this button activates Relative Mode (see Relative Mode on page 142). Immediately below the ABS/REL button is the REL S. button (Relative Speed) which prevents the platter speed from changing when switching between decks when controlling multiple decks with a single control source (see Relative Speed Mode on page 143). When using external Vinyl or CD control, Torq will preserve the pitch of the music even if you change the speed of the turntable or CD player. When you scratch, Torq will disable time-stretching and re-enable it when you let the music play again. If you want Torq to respond like a true vinyl record, click the Key/Speed Lock button so that key and speed are locked together. You will then hear pitch changes when altering the speed of the turntable or CD player. External Control can be configured in the Torq Preferences dialog as explained in External Control on page 139.
Switching a Deck to External Control Mode while using the internal soundcard on a laptop, causes Torq to use the sound picked up by the internal microphone as the control source. This causes the BPM value and Speed Adjust randomly change, leading to errors.

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Master/Sync
Auto Master Deck
By default this function is always active, and automatically chooses the Master Deck based on the position of the Crossfader and the Level Meters. Pressing the AUTO button in the Torq Toolbar deactivates and activates Auto Master Deck.

AUTO Button

Master Button
Clicking this button selects a Deck as the Master Deck and the Master Tempo will change to the tempo of the new Master Deck. With a Deck set as the Tempo Master, all tempo based Torq functions and Looped samples will follow its tempo even if there are tempo changes (set with Tempo Anchors) will follow the Master Deck. If youre using Torq Xponent as your controller, you can select a Master Deck by holding a SHIFT button on the controller and pressing the corresponding Sync button. The Auto Master Deck function will be disabled and the Xponent Sync button will flash, confirming that the target deck is the Master.
If you are using Torq with qualified third party controller, refer to the documentation provided with your hardware for detail about the equivalent functionality.

Sync Button
Clicking the Sync button automatically synchronizes a Deck to the Master Tempo. While Sync is active, the Deck is also affected by changes to the Master Tempo. For example, if you lower the Master Tempo, the other deck will also slow down. If you attempt to scratch or re-align the deck, Torq will automatically snap it back into alignment to match the phase of the Master Tempo. When you deactivate the Sync button, the deck maintains the tempo setting allowing the song to play at the Master Tempo. However, Torq will no longer attempt to keep the Deck in sync if you make changes to it, such as scratching.

Nudge Buttons

Nudge Button

If youre not taking advantage of Torqs ability to keep tracks aligned using Sync, you can do it manually using the Nudge buttons. If a song becomes ahead or behind the other, the Nudge buttons let you push the song back into alignment by creating a small change to the playback speed of the song. If the song is ahead of the beat, press the right Nudge button to slow it down. Youll see the waveforms of the two songs move in relation to each other. Release the Nudge button once the songs are aligned properly and the original playback speed will be restored.

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Synq Reference Button


The Sync Reference Button lets you change the forcefulness or resolution of the synchronization between the Decks. Each click of this button cycles through the options listed below.

Synq Reference Button

Bar (Default)

With this option selected, Torq will align a synced Deck to the tempo and downbeat of the other Deck or Master Tempo. Any attempts to adjust the alignment of the track will result in Torq forcing the tracks back into synchronization with their downbeats aligned (the thick lines of the Phase Grids will be aligned with each other at all times).
Beat

Torq will match a synced Deck to the tempo and beat of the other Deck or Master Tempo with no regard to the downbeats in the Phase Grids. Any attempts to realign the synced Deck will result in Torq forcing the track back into alignment with the nearest beat (the thick lines of the Phase Grids may be out of alignment with each other).
Tempo

Torq will only match the tempo of a synced Deck to the other Deck or Master Tempo. When you press Play on a Deck, Torq will not force the song into alignment. It will be up to you to start the music at the right moment and keep it in alignment.

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Speed Slider (SPEED)

Speed Slider

Torqs Decks are each equipped with a Speed Adjust slider for the purpose of beat-matching songs. This slider behaves just like the pitch adjusters found on DJ turntables and CD players. As you move this slider, the neighboring ADJ display will show how much the songs speed is being altered (expressed as a percentage where 0% is the original speed of the song) and the BPM display will change to show the new tempo of the song. For those not familiar with these controls, your first impression may be that the slider is working backward since the speed of the song will increase as you move the slider down on screen. However, this is the proper behavior for pitch controls found on DJ turntables and CD players. It makes sense if you consider the following: The pitch adjust slider on a turntable is mounted flat on the surface of the turntables housing. Therefore, when you use the slider, you either push it away from you or pull it towards you. When a song is going too fast, you push the slider away from yourself, just as if you put out your hand in a slow down motion. If you need the song to go faster, you pull the slider toward you, similar to how you would gesture towards yourself if you wanted someone to move quickly. After a few hours of practice, this backward response will feel natural.
All tempo changes made on a designated Master Deck will also be applied to the Master Tempo.

Speed Range (RNG)


By default, the range of the Speed Adjuster is +/- 8%. That means that if you move the slider to either of its extremes, youll only get an 8% change in the speed of the song. To the left of the Speed Adjuster is a display showing the current range setting for the slider: You can change the range of the Speed Adjuster by clicking on this range display. Each time you click, the range will advance to the next highest setting. The order is: 8%, 10%, 20%, 50%, then 100%. When you click the display again, the range will wrap around back to 8%. Youll only need to increase the range when youre trying to match two songs with very different tempos, or when you want to perform an extreme speed change as a special effect (especially effective when the range is set to 100%). Most experienced DJ's will simply match the tempos of two songs by hand using the Speed Adjust slider, which is a perfectly acceptable method of matching songs (indeed, this is the way its been done for decades). Since it requires a lot of practice to hear when one song is playing faster or slower than another, those new to DJing will benefit from some of the extra features built into Torq. Such features include automatic beat detection, BPM displays, scrolling waveform displays, and automatic synchronization.

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BPM Display (BPM)

BPM Display

Tempo is a measurement of the speed of a song and is normally expressed as Beats Per Minute (BPM). As the BPM increases, the speed of the song increases. In order for two songs to be mixed together with their beats aligned, the two songs will need to be playing at the same tempo. This is why Torq decks are equipped with Sync Buttons and Speed Sliders. In the event that you are trying to mix two songs with different tempos (which happens more often than not), you will need to use the Speed Sliders or Sync Buttons to match the tempo of the new song to the tempo of the current song.

Automatic BPM Detection


Any time you load a new track into a Deck, Torq will analyze it and attempt to determine the tempo of the song. For most dance music, Torq will be able to determine the tempo accurately. Once scanned, the tempo of the song will be shown in the BPM display for the Deck, which is located just to the left of the Speed Adjust slider.
The Torq beat-detection system usually provides accurate results when set to default settings. However some types of complex music can confuse the software resulting in incorrect tempos. In these cases you can specify the type of music youll be using in the Preferences menu. This limits the tempo range used by the beat-detection system and increases the accuracy of the function. Be sure your selection matches the type of music youre trying to analyze. If you have Drum & Bass selected and attempt to analyze a trip-hop song, Torq will give you the wrong tempo. In this instance you can change the music type and re-analyze the song if needed.

The BPM value will change if you alter the speed of the song with the Speed Adjuster. This is extremely helpful when trying to synchronize two songs since youll be able to match the tempos of the two songs just by matching the BPM values shown in the displays.

Flatten Tempo
When this button is pressed, this function analyzes the position of all Tempo Anchors and the speed of the music between each of them to come up with an average tempo. This lets you synchronize the other decks to the song. This is useful when locking one or more of the other decks to a song that has a live drummer. For example, you have song on Deck A where the drummer tends to speed up right before a drum fill, and may get even faster during the choruses, only to slow back to the basic song tempo during the verses. On Deck C you have song with a more constant tempo because it contains programmed drums. Pressing the Flatten Tempo button on Deck 1adjusts the playback to a constant tempo based on the average speed calculated by Torq. An exception to this is when Deck A is synced to a Master Deck that is not playing a song with a constant tempo.
The Flatten Tempo button will be greyed out for decks which do not have Tempo Anchors set up on their songs.

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Divide Tempo
The first time you press this button the tempo of the current song will be divided by 1.5. If the song was detected as 120 BPM, it will now show 60 BPM (120 BPM 1.5 = 60 BPM). The second time you press this button, the division factor will stay the same (1.5) and the tempo changes to 40 BPM (60 BPM 1.5 = 40 BPM).

Multiply Tempo
The first time you press this button the tempo of the current song will be multiplied by 1.5 (the multiplication factor will be shown in the Tooltip). If the song was detected as 120 BPM, it will now show 180 BPM (120 BPM x 1.5 = 180 BPM). The second time you press this button, the multiplication factor will increase to 2. If the song had been detected as 120 BPM, it would now show 240 BPM (120 BPM x 2 = 240 BPM). The multiplication factor will continue to increase in 0.5 steps each time this button is pressed.

Manual Tempo Adjustment (ADJ)


As mentioned above, Torq can determine the tempo of most dance music. Some music, however, is too complex or not repetitive enough for Torq to detect the tempo with precision. Fortunately, you can help Torq to determine the proper tempo through a number of different methods. The appropriate method will be based on the type of tempo correction youre trying to achieve.

Tap Tempo
On rare occasions, Torq will determine an incorrect tempo that has no direct relation to the actual tempo (not a fraction or multiple). At times like this, youll want to use the Tap Tempo feature to determine the tempo of the song while it plays.
To set the tempo using Tap Tempo:
1 2 3

While the song is playing, click on the BPM display with each beat that you hear. The BPM display will update the BPM to reflect the timing of the taps you performed. The more taps you provide, the more precise the calculation will become.

To revert to the automatically determined tempo, hold the Shift key while clicking on the BPM display. This will also clear any Tempo Anchors (see Tempo Anchors on page 56).
Tap Tempo cannot be used if there are Tempo Anchors in a song.

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BPM Entry
If you happen to know the BPM of the song, you can manually enter it into the BPM display, thus overriding the tempo detected by Torq.
To enter BPM manually:
1 2 3

Hold the Shift key and double-click on the BPM display. Type in a new BPM value from your computer keyboard and press Enter. The new BPM will then be set for the song.

If at any time you wish to revert back to the automatically determined tempo, hold the Shift key while clicking on the BPM display. This will also clear any Tempo Anchors if any have been created.

Tempo Anchors
Torq provides you with another alternative in the event that none of the above methods provide an accurate BPM for the song, or when a song contains tempo changes. Torq will allow you to create a custom tempo map for a song employing a feature called Tempo Anchors.
Refer to Tempo Anchors on page 62, for more information about Tempo Anchors.

Key
The Key Adjust is used to raise or lower the key (pitch) of a song without changing the tempo. This is useful when attempting to match the melodies of songs on different Decks during a mix, known as key-matching. You can adjust the key of a song with the Key Adjust buttons or by dragging the up or down on the Key Display.

Fine Tuning
To fine-tune a songs key:
1 2

Click and hold the mouse cursor over the Key Display number. Drag the mouse up or down. The number will adjust in increments of one cent.

To reset the key transposition to 0, hold down the Shift key on your computer keyboard and click on either of the Key Adjust buttons Key Displays. If you have adjusted the key in finer increments, the key will be reset to 0, however the fraction will remain. For example, if the key is 4.23, resetting will make it 0.23.

Key Lock
The Decks in Torq have the special ability to change the playback speed of the song without changing the pitch of the song (this is known as time-compression and time-expansion). This means you dont have to worry about music changing pitch as you beat-match. However, if you would like to disable this feature and essentially lock the Key and Speed of the music together, turn on the Key/Tempo Lock button. With this on, the music will behave like a regular vinyl record (slowing down the music will make the music drop in pitch).

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MIDI Slider/Knob Control


MIDI control of the Key Adjust is different from other controls in Torq. You can assign a knob or slider to the Key Adjust, or you can assign keys on your MIDI keyboardthe behavior of the Key Adjust is dependent on your control method.
To assign a MIDI slider or knob to Key Adjust:
1 Make sure that your MIDI keyboard or control surface has been properly installed and is configured to work with Torq. Please see chapter 6 for more information about configuring your external MIDI hardware to control Torq. 2

Right-click (CTRL-click, Mac) on the Key Display; it will turn red indicating that its waiting for an assignment.

3 Move a MIDI knob or slider on your MIDI controller. This will automatically assign the knob or slider to the Key Adjust. 4

The Key will be adjustable in one-semitone steps.

MIDI CC value 64 equals + 0 semitones. This generally means when the knob or slider of your MIDI controller is at center position, the Key will be at 0.
To assign a MIDI button to Key Adjust:

Make sure that your MIDI keyboard or control surface has been properly installed and is configured to work with Torq. Please see chapter 6 for more information about configuring your external MIDI hardware to control Torq.
1 2

Right-click (CTRL-click, Mac) on the [+] Key Adjust button. It will turn red indicating that its waiting for an assignment. Press a button on your MIDI controller to assign it to the [+] Key Adjust button.

4 Right-click (CTRL-click, Mac) on the [-] Key Adjust button. It will turn red indicating that its waiting for an assignment. 5 6 7 8

Press a button on your MIDI controller to assign it to the [-] Key Adjust button. Now that your buttons are assigned, press the button assigned to [+]. The Key will move up one semitone. Now press both buttons simultaneously. The Key Adjust will return to 0.

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To control Key Adjust with your MIDI Keyboard:


1 Make sure that your MIDI keyboard or control surface has been properly installed and is configured to work with Torq. Please see chapter 6 for more information about configuring your external MIDI hardware to control Torq. 2

Right-click (CTRL-click, Mac) on the Key Display. It will turn red indicating that its waiting for an assignment.

3 Press a key on your MIDI keyboard. This key will automatically be assigned as the root key of the Torq Key Adjust.

If you press a MIDI key that is 1 semitone ABOVE the root key, the Decks Key will be changed to +1 (semitones).
4

If you press a MIDI key that is 2 semitones BELOW the root key, the Decks Key will be changed to -2 (semitones).
5 6

The range of Key transposition is plus or minus (+/-) 12 semitones. This makes it possible to control the Key Adjust of all Decks using a single MIDI controller keyboard, as long as the keyboard has enough keys to make up four (4) octaves.
Torq allows notes from the same controller and MIDI channel to be used as long as the root keys are at least two octaves apart.

Effects (FX)
Torq includes 13 internal VST effects units, and offers support for qualified third party external VST effects. The Effects section of each deck lets you load up 5 (4 internal and 1 external) plug-ins at a time. This means you can use up to 20 effects (10 in Two Deck mode) within your mix at the same time.
Refer to VST Effects on page 94, for more information about using VST effects with Torq.

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Chapter 6: Waveform Display

One of the most prominent features of the Torq user interface is the Waveform display, located above the Mixer. Unlike the smaller Overview Waveforms found in each Deck, the Scrolling Waveforms only show a few seconds of the current song before and after the current play position. This lets you see the alignment and synchronization of the Decks, and providing other important information as explained in this chapter. The song in Deck A is shown at the top of the Scrolling Waveform display, with songs on Decks B, C, shown immediately below. In Two Deck mode the Waveform Display shows the song loaded on Deck B in the top half with the song on Deck C below it. While the yellow Now Line in the Overview Waveform for each deck moves from left to right as a song plays, the Orange Now Line in the Waveform Display remains stationary as the Waveform moves.

Waveform Display in Four Deck Mode

Waveform Display in Two Deck Mode

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Information Shown on the Display


Waveform
By looking at the audio waveform itself, you can see where the beats are in the song. These sharp hits (transients) typically look like long, thin spikes in the waveform. In the picture below, you can see the heavy bass drum beats of a song in the Waveform Display.

Waveform display

When the drums stop, youll notice that the tall spikes go away. This is how you can tell if a breakdown or slow section of the song is approaching. This is also lets you see where the drums come back in.

Waveform display showing lower-volume audio

Phase Grid

Waveform with Phase Grid

By default Torq superimposes a Phase Grid over the Scrolling Waveforms to indicate the location of the beats in a song. The thicker lines in the Phase Grid indicate the locations of the downbeats (beginning of each bar) in the music. Torq will attempt to position the Phase Grid in the proper location as part of the analysis when loading a song into a Deck, and uses the position of the Phase Grid to properly synchronize the song.

Hiding the Phase Grid

Hide Phase Grid Button

If you would like to turn the Phase Grid lines off, click the Hide Phase Grid button located above the waveform display (next to the zoom controls).
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Zoom

Zoom controls

Torq lets you zoom in or out of the Waveform Display using the Zoom control found in the Toolbar, by clicking the magnifying glass icon, and moving the mouse with the button held down. When this is done the value will change in increments of 0.1of a second, allowing you to see as little one second or as much as 40 seconds of the waveform either side of the orange Now Line. Zooming in is useful for matching beats more precisely, while zooming out allows you to see how the Phase Grids for each song line up over a longer duration of time.

Maximize Waveform View

Maximize Waveform Button

Clicking the Maximize Waveform button located in the Toolbar expands the Waveform Display so that it takes up the whole of the user interface, hiding all other Torq controls except the Toolbar. This lets you view the waveforms in greater detail, and when used in conjunction with the Zoom control allows for increased precision when matching beats.

Marker Display
Whenever you set Loop Points, or Cue Markers within a song Torq places visual representations of them and their positions in the Waveform Display as described below.

Loop Points

Loop Points

The Loop Points of the song (set with the Loop In/Out buttons or the QuickCue buttons) will be shown on the Waveform. The looped area of the music will appear in a lighter shade compared to the rest of the waveform.

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Cue Points

Cue Points

If youve used the Cue button or QuickCue buttons to place various Cue Markers in the song, you will see them here. The QuickCue markers have numbers attached to them (corresponding to the assigned QuickCue button) and the standard Cue Point appears as an red line.

Tempo Anchors
In addition to its automatic BPM detection features, Torq provides you with another alternative for BPM matching that becomes an indispensable tool when working with songs that include tempo changes or fluctuations (Torqs automatic beat detection is designed to work with songs that have a constant tempo). Using Tempo Anchors, you can manually specify the location of beats within a song thus allowing Torq to follow the tempo of any song even if it speeds up or slows down in the middle. Editing Tempo Anchors is a more involved process and should therefore only be used in the event that none of the normal methods yield the proper results. Tempo Anchors are edited within the Scrolling Waveform window and should be done at the highest zoom factor so you can place the Anchors accurately. Furthermore, this is more of an off-line processyou should prepare a song with Tempo Anchors before trying to play it to an audience. Torq will save the Tempo Anchors in the TQD file so that you will only have to do this once for any particular song.

Tap Tempo
In order to add Tempo Anchors to a song you will need to map a key such as the space bar or a button on your control hardware to the Tap Tempo function.
To map a key or button to the Tap Tempo function:
1 2 3

Choose the Deck that you want to use when adding Tempo Markers to a song. Right click on the BPM display for the Deck. Tap the key or controller button you are mapping to the Tap Tempo function.

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Adding Tempo Anchors


To add Tempo Anchors to a song:
1 2

Load a song onto a deck and press the Play button.

Use the Tap Tempo feature to determine the approximate tempo while the song plays. The tempo will appear in both the Global BPM display in the Toolbar, and the Deck BPM display. This is very important since this will get the Phase Grid close to the proper position leaving only minor edits for you to do later.
3 4

Stop the song and rewind back to the beginning.

Hold SHIFT and drag the Phase Grid so that the downbeat (the thicker white line) is aligned with the first visible beat of the song. This will ensure that the Phase Grid starts at the right locationyou will only need to use Tempo Anchors to fix issues where the Phase Grid drifts out of alignment.

Click the Edit Anchor Points button in the Toolbar. The background of the Scrolling Waveforms will turn purple indicating that Anchor Edit is active.
5

Edit Anchor Points Button

Search through the song looking for places where the Phase Grid no longer aligns with the beats of the music. When you find one that is out of alignment, double-click it. The line will change from grey to green indicating that the grid line has been turned to a Tempo Anchor.
6 7

Now that the grid line has been converted to a Tempo Anchor, you can now move it left or right until it aligns with the beat. Simply click-and-drag the Anchor to set it to a new location.

Repeat steps 6 and 7 until all of the tempo anomalies have been corrected. When complete, every grid line and Tempo Anchor should visually align with the beats in the song.
8 9

Click the Edit Anchor Points button again to exit Anchor Edit mode. The Scrolling Waveforms will revert to their original color. Now, when you play the song, it will play with a constant tempo (the tempo variations will be removed). Some will say that editing Tempo Anchors is more of an art than a science. Indeed, there are other techniques that can be used other than the steps listed above which will give the same results. As you edit more and more songs, youll learn which techniques are best for various types of music. Here are a few other methods that can assist with Tempo Anchors:

Tap Tempo Anchors

If you use Tap Tempo when Anchor Edit is on, each tap will place a Tempo Anchor at that location. If youre working with a song that has lots of tempo changes (such as older music that was not recorded to a click track) this can be very advantageous. Just tap along with the music and the Phase Grid will be pretty close to where it needs to be. You can then manually adjust any of the Tempo Anchors that need it.
Use fewer Tempo Anchors

While you could surely turn every single grid line into a Tempo Anchor, this is usually not necessary. Often, long sections of a song will have a consistent tempo. In these cases, its usually enough to place a Tempo Anchor at the beginning and another at the end of that section. All the grid lines will distribute themselves evenly between the Tempo Anchors.
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Fixing corrupted audio files

From time to time, you may notice that a song seems perfectly in sync then suddenly falls out of sync. This can be due to corruptions within the audio file. Torq will skip over sections of data that are corrupted and will continue to play the remainder of the song. Every time Torq skips over corrupted data, it will make the Phase Grid look like it has shifted to the right. In cases like this, you can use Tempo Anchors to adjust the tempo only where the jump occurs. Simply make two Tempo Anchors one right before the jump and one right after. Drag the second Anchor to the left until it is aligned with the beat. All of the grid lines to the right of the last Anchor will shift as well so the remainder of the song will then be in alignment (unless there is another corruption).

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Chapter 7: The Mixer

The Torq Mixer sounds and behaves just like a professional hardware mixer with the added advantage of being able to support all four decks. The layout instantly familiar to anyone who has used a mixer before, and it is capable of performing the same techniques utilized by DJ's on traditional hardware mixers.

Torq Mixer in Four Deck Mode

Mixer Architecture
Before you start tweaking knobs and sliders on the Mixer, you should have a basic understanding of the components in the mixer and the signal flow between the components. Without this basic understanding, some controls may seem to be misbehaving or completely inoperative, only because youve unknowingly set another control to a conflicting position. Additionally, there are some terms you should get to know, as they will be used repeatedly throughout this User Guide.
When the mouse is moved over a knob, slider or button the name of the control and a brief description, is displayed in the lower edge of the Torq window.

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Channels

Four Deck Mode - Mixer Channels

In Four Deck mode the Mixer has four channels, one for each Deck labelled A,B,C, and D to correspond with their respective decks. When switched into Two Deck Mode decks B and C are available. While the signals from all Decks enters the same mixer, they remain on their respective mixer channels. This lets you to process each audio signal differently before mixing them together into a single output channel (which is what your audience hears). Each Mixer channel has a dedicated set of controls as described below:

Line Input Button

Line Input Buttons

Next to each channel name (A, B, C, and D or B and C in Two Deck mode) is a Line Input button. Clicking this button will activate the line input for the corresponding channel. This lets you to send audio from an external audio source connected to your audio interface (for example a CD player or turntable) to the channel.
In order for Line Input to work you will need to assign audio channels to the Line Inputs in the Audio tab of the Preferences. See Audio Preferences on page 111 for more information about setting up these inputs.

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Gain/Mute

Gain Knob

This knob increases or decreases the volume of the incoming audio signal by as much as 12db. This lets you match the levels of the songs youre mixing together.

Gain Mute Button

The G button next to the Gain knob is the Mute button. Pressing this button will mute the incoming audioresulting in a silent channel.

EQ/Kills
Each mixer channel is equipped with a 3-band EQ which lets you use each knob to control the levels of High (H), Mid (M), and Low (L) frequencies of the song being played. Turning them to the right boosts their respective frequency range, while turn them to the left decreases it. Next each knob you will find a corresponding kill button. Pressing them completely removes their corresponding frequency from the audio signal. When all three have been pressed the signal is muted in the same way as if the Mute button (G) has been activated. The EQ controls are used to (1) improve the sound quality of poorly recorded or produced songs, (2) assist in matching the overall frequency content of two songs, (3) add emphasis to the music by removing or isolating one or more of the frequency ranges, and (4) mix songs together in a jigsaw fashion by swapping the frequency ranges of two songs as they play together. Old songs typically dont have as much bass as todays tracks. Therefore, youll often use the Low EQ to boost the bass (low frequencies) of the old song to match the louder bass of a recent song. Without doing this, it may sound like the music gets quieter as you mix from the recent song to the older one. Likewise, even tracks recorded within the same year can sound different from one another, even when playing at the same volumes. This is usually because one song will have stronger Mid frequencies compared to the other. If the bass parts in both songs sound like theyre the same volume, you can use the Mid EQ to turn down the louder song until it more closely matches the quieter song. DJ's also like to mix things up during their sets by adding their own manipulations to the songs they play. For example, a DJ might cut the High and Low frequencies from a track a few beats before the chorus of a song, then bring them back right when the chorus starts (the perfect job for Torqs High and Low Kill buttons). When two songs are playing at the same time, youll frequently find that the music sounds muddy. This is normally due to un-complementary bass content in the two songs. This can be as simple as the two songs being in different keys, or could occur if both songs have long, sustained bass notes. In order to clean things up, you can simply remove the bass from one of the songs with one of the Low Kill buttons. This will leave the bass from the other song in the mix, so it will still sound natural. When youre ready, press both Low Kill

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buttons at the same time. This will kill the bass in the first track while bringing in the bass from the other. This will sound like the bass part in the overall mix has changed (which it has) and the mix will still sound full. You can also swap frequencies with the other frequency bands. You can also make the swaps less abrupt by using the EQ knobs instead.

PFL/Headphone Button
Once the audio signal leaves the EQ, it is sent to two different locations. One location is the PFL Button, which looks like a pair of headphones. PFL stands for Pre-Fader Listen, which refers to hearing an audio signal without being under the influence of the Volume fader (on some mixers, this function is called Cue). That definition may not make sense if youre not familiar with a mixer, so think of it as a way to privately hear the music in a mixer channel regardless of what your audience can or cannot hear. This is what a DJ uses to listen to the next song before he plays it for his audience. When you press the PFL button, that channel is sent to the PFL/Headphone section (see PFL/Headphone Cue on page 69). This lets you use your headphones to hear how a mix will sound before your audience hears it.

Channel Volume Faders


Besides going to the PFL, the audio leaving the EQ also goes to the Channel Volume fader. This is the primary volume control for the channel (though it is subordinate to the crossfader) which works just like a volume fader on a traditional mixer. You can match volumes of the two tracks using the Channel Volume faders. However, some DJ's prefer the technique of leaving the Channel Volume faders fully upyou then match the volumes of the songs using the Gain knobs. The reason for this is that youre then free to use the Channel Volume faders for other effects such as volume fades, cuts, and stutter effects, similar to the scratch techniques used on the Crossfader. Whichever approach you choose is entirely up to you.
You can quickly return a Channel Volume fader to full volume by holding SHIFT and clicking on the fader.

Line Input Buttons


Located above the PFL icons in each channel of the Mixer is a Line Input icon. Clicking this icon will activate the line input for that channel. This will allow you to feed audio from an external audio source (such as a CD player or turntable connected to your audio interface) for mixing with Torqs Mixer. All functions, such as EQ, Gain, Effects, and PFL, will still work even when using external audio sources.
In order for Line Input to work you will need to assign audio channels to the Line Inputs in the Audio tab of the Preferences. See the Preferences section for more information on setting up these inputs.

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PFL/Headphone Cue

PFL - Four Deck Mode

PFL - Two Deck Mode

PFL stands for Pre-Fader Listen, which refers to hearing an audio signal without being under the influence of the Volume fader (on some mixers, this function is called Cue). That definition may not make sense if youre not familiar with a mixer, so think of it as a way to privately hear the music in a mixer channel regardless of what your audience can or cannot hear.

Split Button
Clicking the Split button (headphone icon) sends the PFL signal from any Deck to the left side of your head phones while the signal your audience hears will be on the right side. This makes it easier for you to hear misalignments in rhythm and tempo. Clicking the Split again switches off split mode and the PFL signal from a deck will be heard in both sides of your headphones.

Source Knob
The Source Knob lets you balance the levels between the PFL signal from a deck and the main mix with or without split mode being active. Turning it all the way to the left mutes the Main Mix leaving your with just the PFL signal in the left side of your headphones. turning it all the way to the right mutes the PFL signal leaving the main mix signal in your headphones.

Volume Knob
This knob (slider in Two Deck mode) controls the overall volume of the PFL section in your headphones.

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Hide Mixer

Hide Mixer View Button

In both Four Deck and Two Deck modes the mixer can be hidden by clicking the Hide Mixer View button located in the Torq Toolbar. This can be useful in various situations, such when you are using an external mixer, or when you want to enlarge the browser. Whenever the Hide Mixer View button is pressed, the Effects Racks move from their respective decks to the center of the center of the Torq interface beneath the Waveform Display. However, instead of four racks there will be two. In Four Deck Mode, each rack has four buttons on the left side labelled A, B, C, and D to correspond with each deck. In Two Deck mode, the will be two buttons labelled B and C. In either mode, pressing any of these buttons lets you accesses the Effects Rack for their respective Deck, and the appearance of the rack will change to reflect the current effects units and their settings. Aside from these differences, the Effects Racks, will continue to function as described in Chapter 8, Effects.

Four Deck Mode - Mixer Hidden

Two Deck Mode - Mixer Hidden

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Crossfader

Crossfader

The Crossfader lets you to fade between two audio signals. When the Crossfader is in the middle position, you will hear both decks that are sent to it. If you move the Crossfader all the way to the left, you will only hear the audio from the Deck assigned to that side. Similarly, if you move the Crossfader all the way to the right, you will only hear the Deck assigned to the right side.
The Torq Crossfader has been designed to be very quick and responsive. However, if you are only using a mouse to control Torq, you probably wont be able to use the Crossfader for more than fading between songs. If you want to use the Crossfader for cuts and scratching, we recommend using a qualified M-Audio or third party hardware controller. A current list of qualified hardware controllers can be found on our website: www.avid.com.

Crossfader Curve
The Crossfader Curve knob set the rate at which the songs fade in and out as the crossfader is moved from one side to the other. By default, the Crossfader knob is set to the twelve oclock position or halfway between the two extremes. Turning the knob all the way to the left sets the Equal Power Contour, which is good for slow fades between two songs. As you move the fader from the edge toward the center, it will slowly fade in one song. However, as it is fading in this song, it will also start fading out the other song. The end result is that the overall volume remains the same as you fade, even when both songs are playing at the same time. When the knob is turned all the way to the right, Crossfader is set to the Hard Cut curve. This shape causes a song to fade in to full volume almost immediately after moving the fader inward from the edge. Similarly, the other song will not begin to fade out until the crossfader is almost all the way at the other edge. Then, right before the crossfader reaches the edge, the other song will fade down. This is the shape preferred by scratch DJ's as they can cut in a track to full volume with very little motion of their hand. When performed quickly, you dont even hear the volume fade up and downit sounds as if the sound is being abruptly cut in and out.

Input Assign Buttons


By default, in Four Deck Mode Deck A is routed to the left side of the Crossfader while Deck B is routed to the right. However Torq lets you assign any of the four decks or a combination of decks to either side by clicking the Deck Buttons located at both end of the Crossfader. The buttons for any unassigned decks will be grey but they will change color as soon as they are clicked. In Two Deck mode the default input assignment routes Deck B to the left side of the Crossfader while Deck C is assigned to the right. Either deck can be re-assigned using the B and C buttons at either end of the Crossfader. The button for an unassigned deck will be grey, but the button will change color as soon as it is clicked.

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In both Four Deck and Two Deck Mode you can click the button for an assigned deck to cancel the current input assignment. However if the deck is playing a song when you do this, the signal will by pass the Crossfader and go straight to the Main Out to be heard by the audience.

Crossfader Invert

Crossfader Invert Button

This button lets you swap the assignments so that a deck routed to the one side of the Crossfader will be switched to the other. For example, if you have Deck B routed to the left side of the Crossfader and Deck C on the right, clicking this button reverses the routing so that Deck D is heard when the Crossfader is moved to the right and Deck C is heard when it is moved to the left. This is sometimes known as hamster style control.

Crossfader PFL/Headphone

Crossfader PFL Button

Clicking this button diverts the audio signal from the Master Output to the Crossfader to the PFL/Headphone cue. This lets you preview your mix before your audience hears. Clicking this button a second time, sends the signal back to the Master Output and your mix will be heard by everyone in the room.

Traq Morph
Traq Morph lets you perform crossfades with various and sometimes dramatic characteristics. This function is switched on as soon as you press one of the four Mode buttons described below. With Traq Morph switched off the Crossfader performs normal volume-based transitions for one deck to the other.

Direction Button

Direction Button

Each Traq Morph mode is directional and you can use the direction button to determine which deck the crossfade effect is applied to. Selecting the direction also determines which track will be the source of the morphing characteristic. If for example, you have songs on Decks B and C with the Crossfader set all the way over to Deck B, pressing a Morph Mode button (Mph) followed by the direction button sets Deck B as the source. In this instance, when the Crossfader is moved toward Deck C the second song will adopt the sonic characteristics of Deck B.

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Traq Morph Modes


Traq Morph offers four crossfade modes as described below.

Frequency

Traq Morph - Frequency

This mode lets you perform a tonal crossfade by simultaneously sweeping the frequency range of both tracks. You can choose the either of the following tonal characteristics from the Traq Morph Filter Style pop-up menu on the Behavior Preferences page (see Chapter 12, Torq Preferences).
Low - High (Default)

This mode places a High-Pass filter on the source Deck and a Low-Pass Filter on the second Deck. Both filters are set at the same Cutoff Frequency in order to cover the all of the available frequency range. However, the Cutoff Frequency is changed according to the position of the Crossfader.
Mid

The Mid setting places a Mid-Pass filter on the source Deck and a Mid-Cut filter on the second Deck. This defines a Mid-Band characteristic with a center frequency of 1 kHZ that is cut from the source Deck and passed to the second Deck. The width of the Mid-Band is controlled by the Crossfader.

Duck

Traq Morph - Duck

Duck mode lets you create a seamless crossfade that does not layer one track over the other like a conventional crossfade. This is done using either a frequency based or volume based ducking effect. This lowers the perceived volume of the first track at the very moment the crossfader reaches the transition point between two audio signals. The overall effect is the both tracks will sound like one continuous song. You can choose the either of the following settings from the Traq Morph Duck Style pop-up menu on the Behavior Preferences page (see Behavior Preferences on page 127).
Band - Duck (Default)

As the Crossfader is moved from one deck to another Torq locates the loudest frequency of the second song and gradually attenuates, or lowers the same frequency in the first song. For example, lets say you have songs on Decks B and C with the Crossfader set to Deck B, and the loudest frequency in the signal from Deck C is 240 Hz. In this instance, the volume of the song on Deck B will gradually decrease at 240 HZ, as the Crossfader is moved towards Deck C.
Standard

This setting lowers the volume of the first Deck across the whole frequency range as the Crossfader moves towards the second Deck.
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Cut

Traq Morph - Cut

This mode lets you perform crossfades while rhythmically cutting between two decks. These settings are useful when mixing Techno or House music, especially if the songs have short (1 bar or 2) looped sections. You can choose from the following settings from the Traq Morph Cut Style pop-up menu on the Behavior Preferences page (see Chapter 12, Torq Preferences).
1/8 - 1/8 (Default)

This cuts between songs in an 1/8 note rhythm where the source Deck is heard on the first 1/8 note while the other Deck plays is heard the second 1/8 note, otherwise known as the off-beat.
1/16 - 3/16

This setting cuts between songs in a 1/16 note rhythm where the source Deck is heard on the first 1/16 note of each beat while the other Deck plays is heard the on the following three 1/16 notes.
1/6 - 16

This setting cuts between songs in a 1/16 note rhythm. The difference here is that Torq alternates between the signals source Deck is heard on the first 1/16 note and third 1/16 note of each beat while the other Deck plays is heard the on second and fourth 1/16 notes of each beat. Cutting in this manner is best for mixing songs with a strong 1/16 note feel, such as Trance or Drum n Bass.

Triplet Mode

Triplet Mode Button

Clicking the Triplet mode button in the Torq Toolbar activates Triplet mode, which adds a triplet or shuffle feel to all time based or rhythmic functions. Triplet mode is very useful for adding a higher degree of syncopation to your mixes. When using the Traq Morph Cut algorithm, clicking Triplet Mode button in the Torq Toolbar changes the rhythmic timing of the 1/8 - 1/8, and 1/16 - 3/16, 1/16 - 1/16 settings to 1/8T - 1/8T, 1/16T - 3/16T, and 1/16T - 1/16T, even though the new setting do not appear in the list of available choices under the Traq Morph Cut Style preferences (see Behavior Preferences on page 127).

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Morph

Traq Morph - Morph Mode

Morph mode lets you perform a crossfade where one track is made to sound a close as possible to another. This mode is useful when mixing a song the source Deck that is very rhythmic with a song on the second Deck has a lot of bright sounding keyboard pads. Mixing in this manner causes the pad to adopt rhythmical characteristics that are not in the original recording. You can choose the either of the following settings from the Traq Morph Style pop-up menu on the Behavior Preferences page (see Behavior Preferences on page 127).
Strong (Default)

The Strong setting places a 24db filter on a deck which makes the audio signal sound louder and enhances the modulation of the morphing.
Gentle

This setting is more subtle, as it does not increase the volume or exaggerate the modulation the morphing.

Traq Morph Pre-listening


While Traq Morph is active you can hear what your crossfade will sound like before the audience does by temporarily routing the Crossfader signal to PFL channel. This help avoid sudden and sometimes drastic volume changes.
To pre-listen to a Traq Morphed crossfade
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Move the Crossfader all the way to the right or left depending on which deck you want to hear first. Press the Crossfader PFL/Headphone button to send the signal to the PFL channel. Press one of the Morph Mode buttons. If necessary choose one of the related Mode Preferences from the Preference dialog. Perform the crossfade to hear how it will sound. If necessary, change the Mode Preferences, and perform the crossfade again. Press the Crossfader PFL/Headphone button again to route the signal back to the main output. Perform the crossfade for your audience.

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Main Out Section

Main Output

The Main Out section controls main mix heard by your audience and features an audio recorder for recording your performances, as well as a Limiter.

Volume Control
The Main Out knob controls the overall volume of Torqs Main Outputs. It is also used for setting the level of the Torq Recorder. Turning the knob to the right increases the output volume while turning to the left decreases it.

Level Meter and Limiter


Since Torq is a digital audio system, it has a limited amount of headroom (dynamic range). Whenever your mix exceeds the headroom, clipping (distortion) normally occurs. To prevent this undesired sound, Torq features a Limiter on the Main Output which will keep the signal from clipping. It does this by quickly reducing the volume any time the Master Volume exceeds the maximum headroom. However, you want to be sure the limiter isnt being triggered all the time. In this instance, the limiter will reduce the volume all the time, and this will sound strange. If this happens, down the Main Out knob so your mix doesnt constantly activate the limiter, and increase the volume on the house sound system to make up for any reduction in output volume.

Main Out Recorder


The Main Out Recorder lets you record your performances as an audio file. You can then burn the recording onto a CD or distribute it as a Podcast or mp3. The duration of your recording is displayed in the digital counter just below the Record button. Recording a mix performed in Torq involves setting a filename and location where the file will be saved, setting the recording level, and recording your performance as described below

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Filename
To set the filename for your recording:
1 2 3

Click the 00:00:00 Timer. A dialog box will open. Select the destination folder for your recording, and type a name. Press enter. The dialog box will close.

The sample rate of the recorded file will match the sample rate currently selected in the Audio tab of the Preferences.
Refer to Chapter 12, Torq Preferences for more information about setting the sample rate and other audio preferences.

Setting the Record Level


The Main Out volume knob controls the level of your recording. Set volume as high as possible without constantly triggering the limiter (its OK if you trigger the limiter every once in a while). Setting the Main Out volume too low, will result in a recording that is too quiet.
Changes made to the Master Out volume will be committed to your recording, even while youre in the middle of your mix.

Recording
Once you have set the filename and recording level, you can begin recording.
To start recording:
1

Click the Record button. It will light up to indicate that recording has commenced. Youll also see the Record Time window begin to count the length of the recording. Perform your mix as normal.

Press the Record button again to stop the recording and save the file.

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Chapter 8: Effects

Effects are devices that alter an audio signal. These alterations can range from subtle to extreme and can be a great source of creative fun within Torq. Each Deck can be processed individually with multiple effects. When the Mixer is not hidden (see Hide Mixer on page 70), the Effect Racks are located at the bottom of each Deck. Torq lets you load up to four built-in library effects one external VST effect for each Deck. In Four Deck Mode, this means you can use up to twenty effects within your mix at the same time, while Two Deck Mode lets you use up to ten.
When the mouse is moved over a knob, slider or button the name of the control is displayed in the lower edge of the Torq window.

Four Deck Mode - Effects Rack

Two Deck Mode - Effects Rack

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Controls
The controls for the built-in and external VST effects are basically the same and will be described here. However, VST effects have some additional controls and considerations of which to be aware of, and these are covered in VST Effects on page 94.

Effects Slots
To begin using effects, you need to load and effect into one of the Effect Slots.
To load an effect:
1

Click on an empty Effect Slot. A pop-up menu of available effects will appear.

2 Click on one of the effect names from the list to load it into the slot. The name of the effect will appear in the Effect Slot. By default, the Enable button for the slot will change from grey to the corresponding Deck color to signify that the loaded effect is active.

When the Reverse effect is loaded the On/Off button for the Effects Slot will remain grey, because the Reverse effect is always on. See Reverse on page 90.
3

To remove an effect, choose the blank effect at the top of the pop-up list.

Bypass Button (BYP)

Effects Rack Bypass Button

This activates and deactivates an Effect Rack. Because the effects are generally already switched on when loaded, bypassing an empty Rack lets you load an effect or previously saved Effects Rack setup with out unwanted changes to your mix. When using multiple effects at the same time, you may want to turn them on or off all at once (instead of clicking each effects Enable button). Clicking the Bypass button at the top of the Rack sends audio directly to the Mixer, and the effects are no longer heard. Click the button again to disengage the bypass.

Enable Button

Effects Slot Enable Button

The Enable Button switches an individual effect on or off. By default, this button will be on whenever you load a new effect. This allows you to set the effect the way you desire before you use it in your mix.
Some of the effects dont utilize the Enable button and will function in a different way as described in the various effect sections in this chapter.

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Amount Knob (AMT)

Effects Slot Amount Knob

The functionality of the Amount knob differs depending on the status of the Routing button: When the Routing Button is set to Insert/Chain (see Effects Chains - Chain Mode on page 81), the Amount knob will adjust the wet/dry mix of the effect. When the Amount knob is all the way to the left, only the original audio signal will be heard (no effect). When the Amount knob is all the way to the right, only the output of the effect will be heard, thus becoming a full insert effect. When the knob is at 12 oclock, an even 50/50 mix of dry signal and wet effect will be created. When the Routing Button is set to Sendthe knob will act as an effect send amount. When the Amount knob is all the way to the left, the signal is not sent to the effect. As you begin to rotate the Amount knob clockwise, the signal is sent to the effect, and you will begin to hear the results of the effect in your mix.
When used as a Send control, turning the Amount know all the way to the right boosts the effect output, making it louder than the dry source signal.

Routing Button
When using effects, there are basically two different configurations that can be used: Insert and Send. An Insert Effect is placed between the Deck and the Mixer. The audio from the Deck can be fully processed and replaced by the effect. Examples of effects that are typically used as inserts include Distortion, Dual-Filter, Phaser, Flanger, Repeat, Strobe and Reverse.

Routing Button - Insert Mode

A Send Effect blends the sound of the effect with the original music. The effects that are typically used as Sends are Reverb and Delay. When using these effects, you typically want to add Reverb or add a Delay to the music that is already playing. Therefore, think of Insert Effects as replacing your sound, and Send Effects adding to it.

Routing Button - Send Mode

Each time you click the Routing Button, it will toggle its state between Insert and Send. When loading an effect, Torq will automatically set the Routing Button to the mode most appropriate for the effect (i.e. the Reverb will be loaded in Send mode while the Dual-Filter will be loaded in Insert mode).

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Effects Chains - Chain Mode


Torq lets you create Chains with the Send Effects, which takes the output of the Send Effect and process it further with Insert Effects. For example, you can take the output of the Delay and feed it through the Phaser to create psychedelic echo patterns.

Chain Mode Icon

Once the Effect Signal Flow has been set to Chain in the Torq Preferences (see Effect Signal Flow on page 128), a Chain will automatically be created when you place an Insert Effect after Send Effect in the rack. Instead of seeing the normal Insert icon, youll see a Chain icon indicating that the effect is chained to the one above it. This indicates that the effect is taking its audio from the output of the effect above it.
With effects routed in this manner, it is only possible to create an Insert Effect if the Effect is placed before a Send effect in the Rack. All Insert Effects placed after a Send Effect will be chained to it. Also, when using Chain mode, the output of Send effects will be sent to the Crossfader, meaning effects tails of delays and reverbs will still be heard after turning down the Channel Volume fader or stopping playback. However, moving the Crossfader away from the channel will silence both the music and the effects.

Tweak Knob

Routing Button - Insert Mode

To keep things simple and easy to manage, Torq provides the Tweak knob for parameter control on each effect. Because effects alter audio in different ways, the function of this knob will change, and is labelled depending on the effect loaded in the slot.

Tweak Button
The Tweak button toggles the state of a parameter in the selected effect. Like the Tweak knob, its function depends on the effect youre using.

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Saving Effect Racks

Save Effects Rack Button

You can save an entire Effect Rack, including the effects used and their settings, using the Save button at the top of the Rack.
To save an effects rack:

Load the Rack with effects and adjust the controls to get the sound you want, and then click the Save button in the upper right area of the Rack. A standard Save dialog box will appear.
1 2 Type a name for the file and choose a location on your hard drive to store it and click Save (Mac) or OK (Windows). The file will be saved as a preset, containing all information regarding the Effect Rack configuration.

Loading Effect Racks


Previously save Rack settings are loaded as described below.
To load an effects rack:
1 2

Click the Load Rack button. A standard dialog box will appear.

Browse to the location on your hard drive in which the Effect Rack configuration file is stored, select the file, and click Open (Mac) or OK (Windows). The file will load all Effects in your Rack configuration exactly as you saved them.
3

Loading an Effect Rack discards all effects currently in the Rack. If you have a combination you like, make sure to save it before you load in another configuration.

Clearing all Effects


To clear all effects in a rack, hold the Shift button while clicking the racks Bypass button.

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United View

United View Button

United View - Four Deck Mode

United View - Two Deck Mode

Clicking the United View button lets you see all of the effect slots at the same time. Youll notice that although you do not have direct access to the various effects parameter, you still have the ability to enable and disable individual effects units or even a complete Effects Rack. In addition to the plug-in name, each Effects Slot also displays a colored bar representing the value of its Amount knob. United View is useful when loading pre-programmed Effects Racks that you may have prepared for a certain song, or in preventing accidental effects parameter changes. In Four-Deck mode you can alternate between the standard Effects Rack view and United view by clicking either the 1 - 2, 3 - 4, or VST button, followed by the United View button. This lets you quickly access the parameters for any effects slot, and revert to United View. In Two-Deck mode, this view change is achieved by clicking the FX or VST button followed by the United View button.

Triplet Mode

Triplet Mode Button

Clicking the Triplet mode button in the Torq Toolbar activates Triplet mode, which adds a triplet-based quantize options to all time-based effects parameters. These options provide a higher degree of syncopation to the rhythmic quality of the effect, by adding a triplet or shuffle feel.
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For example when using the Strobe effect (see Strobe on page 89) the available quantize settings for the Rate parameter are 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32, 1/64, and 1/128. Pressing the Triplet Mode button changes the last five options to 1/8T, 1/16T, 1/32T, 1/64T, and 1/128T.

Built-In Effects
The following is an explanation of the 10 built-in effects in Torq:

Delay
Delay is the technical term for what the Delay effect does, but youll probably like to think of this effect as an echo. Essentially, the Delay effect listens to the incoming audio, holds on to it for a predetermined amount of time, then spits it back out. When the Delay output is blended in with the audio, it sounds like an echo. Furthermore, you can feed the Delay output back to its input again, causing echoes of the echoes (also known as Feedback). DJ's typically use Delays to fill up space during a break in a song (the last couple of beats before the break can be echoed) or to stretch out the ending of a song by letting it echo and slowly fade away. Because of the tempo-synced nature of Torqs Delay effect, youll also be able to add rhythmic variance by layering echoes that are perfectly timed to the music.

Enable Button
Deactivating this button switches off the Delay effect. The output of the Delay will stop immediately when the effect is turned off.

Amount Knob / Routing Button


When the Routing button is set to Send, the Amount knob will control the amount of audio from the Deck to feed into the Delay. When the knob is fully counterclockwise, no signal will be sent into the Delay so you will not hear any echoes. As you begin to turn up the Amount knob, youll begin to hear the echoes from the Delay. When the Routing button is set to Insert, turning up the Amount knob will cause the output of the Delay effect to replace the sound from the Deck. This is a subtle difference that wont be noticeable until you do one of the following: When you turn the Amount knob beyond its 12 oclock position, the sound from the Deck will begin to fade away, leaving only the sound of the Delay. or If you quickly turn the Amount knob back to 0, you will cut off any remaining echoes before they can be heard. The Delay effect will load with the Routing button set to Send mode since this is the typical routing for a Delay.

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Feedback Knob (FBK)


Use this button to change the Delay time of the effect. The Delays time will be set to match the rate at which you tap this button. The maximum delay time is two bars and the minimum time is 1/16-note (1/16 of a bar). The operation of this button is governed by a few rules: When fully counterclockwise, feedback will be disabled. When the knob is turned up to three quarters of the maximum, the feedback will be 100% (i.e. the delay will never fade away). When the knob is turned past three quarters, the feedback will be increased beyond 100%, allowing the delay to get louder with each time it is repeated.

Tap Button
Use this button to change the Delay time of the effect. The Delays time will be set to match the rate at which you tap this button. The maximum delay time is two bars and the minimum time is 1/16-note (1/16 of a bar). The operation of this button is governed by a few rules: Torq will determine the tempo within only two taps. This allows you to change the delay time very quickly, even while the Delay is already active. Since Torq knows the tempo of the song playing on the Deck, the delay time you tap using the Tweak button will automatically be adjusted to match a note value at the current tempo. For example, if the song BPM is 120, and you tap a tempo that is interpreted as 122 BPM, the delay time will be set to 120 BPM (quarter-note delay). If you tap a tempo that is read as 158 BPM, the delay tempo will be rounded up to 160, which is a dotted-eighth.

Reverb
Reverb is the phenomenon in which sound bounces off the walls within a room, creating hundreds (thousands?) of echoes that cannot be individually identified by the human ear. The total result of all these echoes is a wide and ethereal sound that can add a nice touch of space to your mix. The most obvious characteristic of a Reverb is how long it lasts. This is referred to as the Reverb Time and is the only adjustable parameter in Torqs Reverb effect.

Enable button
This button enables and disables the Reverb effect. If this button is switched off while the Reverb is active, the sound of the Reverb will be cut off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


When the neighboring Routing button is set to Send mode, the Amount knob will set the amount of signal fed into the Reverb processor. This signal will then be blended with the original signal from the Deck, making it sound like the Reverb was added to the song. When the Routing button is set to Insert mode, the Amount knob will adjust the Dry/Wet balance of the Reverb. The difference is that the audio generated by the Reverb will replace the original song as you turn this knob up.

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By default, the Reverb effect will load with the Routing button set to Send mode since this is the typical way to use a Reverb. However, feel free to experiment with Insert modeyou can create ambient textures that can be interesting to blend into your mix.

Time Knob
This knob controls the Reverb time. When fully counterclockwise, the Reverb will be extremely short, similar to the sound heard in a small shower stall. As you turn this knob clockwise, the Reverb will become longer until it sounds similar to a huge cathedral.

Freeze Button
Pressing this button will freeze the Reverb. When activated, the Reverb will stop accepting audio input from the Deck and will feed back on itself instead. The result is a reverb that hangs or stalls indefinitely. When you turn Freeze off, the Reverb will begin accepting input signals again, and the current frozen reverb will fade away following the current Reverb Time. This can be another interesting way to fill up space during a break or to add emphasis to a hit in the song.

Flanger
A Flanger is a common effect found in most effect processors. Flanging grew from a studio trick where engineers would play identical material on two tape decks, then make slight changes to the play speed of the two tape machines by dragging their hand on the flanges of the tape reels. The result is a whooshing sound that can be compared to a jet fly-over.

Enable Button
Naturally, this button turns the Flanger on and off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


Unlike the two effects discussed so far, the Flanger works best with the Routing button set to Insert mode. This allows you to completely replace the original audio signal with the flanged version (by turning this knob fully clockwise) in order to emphasize the effect.
The effect will still work in Send mode, but it will be less pronounced.

Delay/Rate Knob and LFO Button


The function of the Flangers Tweak knob is determined by the state of the LFO button: When the LFO button is off the Delay knob will then control the delay time of the Flanger. When the knob is counterclockwise, the Flange effect will be very tight. As the knob is turned clockwise, the effect will become more dramatic and metallic in nature. When the LFO button is on, the Flanger will be in Automatic mode. In this mode, the delay time for the Flanger will be adjusted automatically. The name of the Delay knob will change to Rate. The knob will now determine the rate of the automatic adjustment. Turning the knob clockwise will increase the modulation rate

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Phaser
A Phaser is a somewhat mellower version of the Flanger. Like the Flanger, a Phaser works on the principle of mixing two identical audio sources together. However, unlike a Flanger, the timing difference between the two audio sources is very small. The result is that some of the frequencies in the song will be removed or cancelled out. Some people describe this sound as a wind tunnel effect.

Enable Button
This button will turn the effect on and off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


Like the Flanger effect above, the Phaser works best with the Routing button set to Insert mode. This allows you to completely replace the original audio signal with the phased version (by turning this knob fully clockwise) in order to emphasize the effect.
The effect will still work in Send mode, but it will be less pronounced.

Frequency (Freq)/LFO Knob and Button


The function of the Frequency Tweak knob is determined by the state of the LFO button: When the LFO button is off, the Phaser will be in Manual mode. The Frequency knob will then control the phase of the effect. If the LFO button is on, the Phaser will be in Automatic mode. In this mode, the phase will be adjusted automatically. The name of the Frequency knob will change to LFO. The LFO knob will then set the rate of the automatic adjustmentturning the knob clockwise will increase the modulation rate.

Dual-Filter
Audio filters prevent particular frequency ranges within an audio signal from passing through the effect. Torq features three of the most popular types: Low-Pass, High-Pass, and Band-Pass. The names of these filters describe what they do. A Low-Pass filter, for example, will only allow low frequencies (bass tones) to pass throughit will remove the high-frequency (treble) content from the audio signal. A High-Pass filter works the other way: it allows the treble to pass through while bass is removed. A Band-Pass filter is essentially a High- and Low-Pass filter put together: it will remove high and low frequencies from the audio signal, only allowing a narrow band of frequencies to pass. The most important parameter for a filter is its Cutoff Frequency. It determines the frequency where a filter will begin to stop frequencies. For example, when using a Low-Pass filter with a cutoff frequency of 1kHz, frequencies below 1kHz will pass through the filter unaffected while the frequencies above 1kHz are reduced or removed. While there are other parameters that also affect the behavior of a filter, Cutoff Frequency is the parameter that youll be controlling in Torq.

Enable button
This button will switch the Dual-Filter on and off.

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Amount Knob and Routing Button


The Dual-Filter is designed to be used as an Insert effect. For this reason, the Routing button will automatically switch to Insert mode whenever you load this effect. Then, the Amount knob will serve as a Dry/Wet adjustment which you will want to leave fully clockwise (so you only hear the output of the Dual-Filter).

Band Pass (BPF) Button


The Band Pass button is used to set the filter mode for the Dual-Filter effect. When this button is off, the two filters (High-Pass and Low-Pass) will be adjusted one at a time. When you click this button on, the High-Pass and Low-Pass filters are be linked, to create a Band-Pass filter where both filters are adjusted simultaneously.

Frequency (Freq) Knob


This knob adjusts the Cutoff Frequencies of the filters. When the BPF button is off, the knob will behave as follows: Setting the knob at 12 oclock results in the audio passing through the Dual-Filter unaffected. Turning the knob counterclockwise from 12 oclock lowers the Cutoff Frequency of the Low-Pass filter. You will hear the music become dull and muffled as you turn this down to the point where youll only hear low bass rumbles. Turning the knob clockwise from the 12 oclock position raises the Cutoff Frequency of the High-Pass filter. You will hear the music become more thin and brittle as you do this until only the highest of the high frequencies remain. When the BPF button is active, the Frequency knob controls the center frequency of the Band-Pass filter. As you turn the knob down (counterclockwise), youll hear the high frequencies become muffled while you begin to hear more of the bass.

Distortion
Distortion, by definition, is the altering of a signal. In practical terms, it refers to feeding audio into a device so loudly that it exceeds the dynamic range of the device. The result is a fairly raunchy noise that, at times, can be exactly what youre looking for. This is known as Overdrive Distortion, and is one of the two types of distortion possible with the Distortion effect. The other type of distortion available in Torq is Sample Rate Reduction. When an audio file has its sample rate lowered, it loses the ability to accurately reproduce high-frequency sounds. Instead of sounding soft and muffled like a Low-Pass filter, the Sample Reducer will sound grainy and harsh.

Enable button
This button turns the Distortion on and off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


Like the Dual-Filter above, the Distortion is designed to be used as an Insert effect. The Routing button will switch to Insert mode automatically any time you load the Distortion effect. You should also turn the Amount knob fully clockwise so that you can only hear the output of the distortion (if you blend the distorted signal with the original signal, the distortion will be less pronounced).

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Mode Button
This button is used to set the operating mode of the Distortion. When the button is off, the Distortion is in Overdrive mode. When the button is on, the Distortion will be in Sample Rate Reduction mode.

Drive/Sample Rate (SRATE) Knob


When Mode button is off, the Drive knob increases the volume of the signal being fed into the distortion. When the knob is fully counterclockwise, the input signal is not boosted and therefore un-distorted. As you turn this knob clockwise, the volume will begin to increase. At a certain point, youll start to hear the audio become distorted. You can leave the knob here for a subtle distortion, or you can continue to turn it clockwise in order to push the distortion into really nasty realms. When the Mode button is active the name of the Drive button will change to SRATE, indication that the effect unit is in Sample Rate Reducer mode. The SRATE knob controls the output sample rate. When the knob is fully counterclockwise, there is no sample rate reduction, so the audio will be un-distorted. As you turn the knob clockwise, the sample rate will be lowered. The high frequencies will be the first to exhibit signs of distortion. As you continue turning the knob, the distortion will move lower and lower into the frequency range of the audio until all that remains is low-sample junk.

Strobe
Just about anyone who has been to a dance club in the last 20 years has experienced a strobe light. Those are the super-bright lights that flash really quickly. They have the effect of making everyone look like theyre in stop motion because the flash is so fast that you cant see movement anymore. Torqs Strobe effect will create a similar stop-motion effect, but it will do it to audio. The Strobe will essentially mute and unmute the audio at a rate that you can control. The rate can be as slow as one bar (2 beats un-muted followed by 2 beats muted) or as fast as 1/64-note.

Enable Button
Turns the Strobe effect on and off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


Because the Strobe effect is designed to mute the audio from a Deck, it needs to be used as an Insert effect. Therefore, the Routing Button will be set to Insert mode whenever you load this effect. The Amount knob will control the Dry/Wet mix of the effect. In other words, this knob controls the depth or intensity of the Strobe effect. Since the Strobe effect is muting the signal that passes through it, setting the Amount knob at 50% will result in 50% of the signal still being present whenever the Strobe is muting.

Rate Knob
This knob changes the rate of the Strobe. A tooltip will appear whenever you adjust this knob to show the current rate (expressed in note values).
Activating Triplet Mode as describe in United View on page 83 adds additional note value choices to the Rate knob.

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Invert Button
Activating this button reverses the behavior of the Strobe, so that what was muted is un-muted and vice versa.

Reverse
Reversing the playback direction of a song is a useful technique for adding emphasis to certain sections of a mix. The traditional method for reversing playback is to actually reverse the rotation of the turntable. This has a couple of inherent problems. First, the turntable cant change direction immediately as it must slow down to a stop then speed back up in the opposite direction. This can make reversing playback seem sluggish. Additionally, if the song is playing backwards, it will no longer be in the proper location when you resume normal playback. For example, if you reverse playback as a way to add emphasis one bar before the chorus in a song, youll find that playback is now two bars before the chorus when you resume normal playback. Torq overcomes these shortcomings by implementing reversed playback as an effect rather than as a function of the Deck. By doing so, you can reverse playback instantaneouslythere is no lag due to the turntable changing directions. Furthermore, since this is an effect, the song on the Deck will continue to play normally (the waveform will continue to scroll in the forward direction) thus keeping the play position correct as you switch the Reverse effect on and off.

Enable Button
When using the Reverse effect, this button is always on and cannot be turned off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


The Amount knob has no function. The effect is routed as an Insert effect by default.

Tweak Knob
The Tweak knob has no function.

Reverse! Button
This button will turn the Reverse on and off. This button is momentary, meaning you have to keep holding it while the song plays backwards. When you release the button, normal playback will resume.

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Beat - Reverse
Beat Reverse lets you create the impression that the drum or percussion parts of a song were recorded backwards.

Enable Button
Turns Beat Reverse on and off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


The Amount knob sets the wet/dry mix of the effect--turn this knob fully clockwise for the proper sound. Beat-Reverse is automatically configured as an Insert effect.

Align Knob
This knob controls the offset of the effect such that turning it to the all the way right increases the offset, making the effect less dramatic. As the knob is turn to the left the effect becomes more pronounced.

HPF Button
Clicking this button places a high-pass filter across the output of the plug-in to accentuate the higher frequency rang or the reversed audio.

Brake
As mentioned above, turntables dont respond instantly to changes in speed or direction. When you press Stop on a turntable, it takes a moment for the turntable to slow down and reach a complete stop. This is due the weight and momentum of the turntabletwo factors that dont exist in the virtual world of Torq. Still, some DJ's like the sound of a turntable slowing down to a stop, and creating that sound is the purpose of Torqs Brake effect. Like the Reverse effect above, the Brake effect does not actually stop the playback of the song on the Deck. Instead, it just simulates the sound of the song slowing down while the song continues to play normally (as seen by the scrolling waveform). Because the song keeps playing, you can use the Brake effect to create the slow-to-stop sound, then bring the music back in on the next downbeat (which is impossible with real turntables or CD players).

Enable Button
This button will be on at all timesit cannot be turned off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


The Amount knob sets the wet/dry mix of the effect--turn this knob fully clockwise for the proper sound. The Brake effect is automatically configured as an Insert effect.

Speed Knob
This knob will set the Brake time. As you turn this knob clockwise, the Brake time will become longer.

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Brake Button
Press this button to engage the Brake effect. The music will slow to a stop. Press the button again to resume normal playback.

Repeat
This effect can be used to create the granular hyper-repeats heard in lots of todays dance music. All you have to do is trigger the effect and play with the loop length to get instant results. Heres how it works:

Enable Button
Engaging this button will start the effect. The Repeat will remain active until this button is turned off again.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


The Amount knob will set the wet/dry mix of the Repeat effect. Turn the knob fully clockwise to hear only the repeated audio. While the audio is repeating, you can use the Amount knob to fade the original music back in if you wish. The effect will automatically be configured as an Insert effect when loaded.

Size Knob
This knob sets the size of the audio slice being repeated. A tooltip will appear showing the current slice length whenever you move this knob. The repeated slices will always be quantized to the current tempo.

Capture Button
When you press this button, it will re-seed the Repeat effect. In other words, the effect will begin repeating a new section of audio whenever you press the button, as if youd instantaneously turned the effect off and back on again.

Resonator
This plug-in adds harmonic resonance to an audio signal.

Enable Button
Switches the plug-in on and off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


The works best with the Routing button set to Insert mode. This allows you to completely replace the original audio signal with the processed version (by turning this knob fully clockwise) in order to emphasize the effect.

Pitch
The Pitch know is used for changing the pitch of, or tuning the resonant frequency.

S/L
This button adjusts the decay of the resonant sound. The default setting is S, which set a short decay time. Pressing this button sets the decay to L, which caused the notes to ring for a longer duration.
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Compressor
The Torq Compressor works in the usual manner to control the volume of an audio signal by limiting or evening out its dynamic range. This is done by lowering the volume of louder sounds while leaving quieter sounds unaltered. In most cases, with the correct setting, this can also make a song sound much louder. With extreme settings, a compressor can be used to add a pumping characteristic to an audio signal.

Enable Button
Pressing this button switches the Compressor on and off.

Amount Knob and Routing Button


The Routing button will automatically switch to Insert mode whenever you load this effect. The Amount knob adjusts the amount of compression used on an audio signal based on increasing both the Threshold and Ratio of the Compressor.

Release Knob
This knob controls the amount of time the Compressor will process the signal before stopping.

Attack Button
Clicking this button significantly decreases the time it takes for the Compressor to react to the volume peaks of the audio. To give you an idea of how this control works, disable the compressor and turn the Amount knob all the way to the right, and the Rate knob all the way to the left. Now play a song with a very strong drum beat, and after a few seconds, click the Enable button to switch on the compressor. You should now hear or feel a pumping or pulsating effect in the music. This is because the short release time causes the compressor to quickly precess and let go of the audio signal. As you turn the Release knob to the right you will notice that the pumping effect becomes less apparent.

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VST Effects
The built-in effects provided with Torq cover a wide range of effects typically used by DJ's. However, others DJs will want to explore the possibilities of additional effects. For this reason, Torq allows you to use third-party VST plug-ins.

Latency
Another potential drawback from using VST plug-ins is latency. Latency is the observed lag between when you trigger an event or action on the computer and when you finally hear the results. When running without any VST plug-ins, Torqs latency is nearly undetectableTorq will respond to scratches, button presses, and knob movements immediately. Some VST plug-ins, however, must perform very complex calculations on the audio. Sometimes, these calculations require that the plug-in buffer the audio so that it can process it in large chunks. In these cases, the plug-in will fill its buffer with some audio sent from Torq. It will then process the audio and send it to an output buffer. Once the output buffer is filled, the audio is sent back to Torq. This process, while extremely fast, can still manifest itself as a perceived lag in response time. And, as you can see, this phenomenon is beyond the control of Torq (the latency is created by the plug-in, not Torq). If you find that a VST plug-in youre using is creating latency, you can try to find a similar-sounding plug-in with minimal latency, or simply try to play ahead and anticipate the latency. While some other programs feature Plug-in Delay Compensation, such a system would not work with Torq because the program is entirely real-time (the music and effects are not preset or programmed).

Selecting Effects
To begin using a VST, youll need to select one from the list of available VSTs.
To select a VST plug-in:
1

Click the VST button to reveal the VST Effect Panel.

2 Click on the pop-up menu at the top of the VST Effect Panel, and then click the name of the VST plug-in you want to load. It will loaded immediately, and the VSTs graphic interface will open and float over the Torq interface.

While the built in Effects units are switch on as soon as they are loaded, you will need to press the Enable button for a VST plug before it can be used.
3 To close the window, click the close icon in the windows title bar or click the VST Window button to the Right of the VST slot. 4

Click VST Window button the To open the same VST interface again.

At the top of the VST drop-down menu list, you will see a blank plug-in as an option. If you select it, no VST will be loaded into the Slot (any current VST will be unloaded).

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Assigning Controls
Its fun to tweak effects using knobs and buttonsVST effects are no exception. However, before you start messing with the Tweak knob and button, youll need to assign a function to them. Unlike Torqs 10 built-in effects, the VST Effect you choose to use will probably have more than two parameters to play with. You can always adjust these parameters within the VST Effects editor window. To gain MIDI control, however, you must assign one of the VST Effects parameter to the Tweak knob or button (which you can control via MIDI). Its a two-part process as outlined below.
To assign VST plug-in controls to Torq Tweak Knobs and Buttons:
1

Load a VST Effect. Its editor window will pop up when loaded.

2 Right-click on the Tweak knob in Torqs interface. It will turn red indicating that it standing by for assignment. 3

Using the mouse, move a control in the VST Effects editor window. This could be a knob, slider, or button.

4 When you move the control, Torq will catch it and assign it to the Tweak knob. Moving the Tweak knob will now operate the assigned VST parameter. 5 To assign a MIDI control to the Tweak knob, follow the usual procedure of right-clicking then moving your desired MIDI control. 6

Once complete, the MIDI control will operate the VST parameter.

The same procedure above can be used for assigning a VST parameter to the Tweak button. Once the assignments are made as described above, Torq will remember those assignments whenever you load that VST Effect in the future.

VST Crash Guard


A plug-in works by inserting small bits of programming code into another program (in this case, youll be inserting an effect processing plug-in into Torq). This can be problematic since some VST's are made with little to no external testing at all (and they may not have been tested with Torq specifically). Granted, its usually the free VST plug-ins found on the web that lack the testing imposed by other professional plug-ins. These dirty plug-ins can be some of the most experimental and creative offerings out there, which is why you may still want to try them. Obviously, it would be completely unacceptable for Torq to crash right in the middle of a gig because of a little VST plug-in. The music must keep playing at all times. For that reason, Torq has been designed with VST Crash Guard, which is a system that will allow Torq to stay running even if an error should occur in the VST plug-in, causing it to crash. If this occurs, Torq will detect the crash and will quickly bypass the offending plug-in to keep the music going. When this happens, you can either attempt to re-load the plug-in (in hopes that it will reset and become functional again) or you can remove the plug-in and try another. Either way, Torqs got your back and will keep the music flowing.

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VST Preset Management


Just as you can save the built-in Effect Rack, you can also save the settings for a VST plug-in. Some plug-ins will manage their own presets from within the GUI. In these cases, youll need to consult the plug-ins user manual to learn how to use the presets. Other VST plug-ins will rely on the host application (Torq, in this case) to manage their presets. In this case, youll need to use the Preset Management tools (save and load) that appear above the plug-in GUI.

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Chapter 9: Sampler

A sampler is a device that digitally records a sound which can be replayed at various pitches. If youre into any kind of electronic dance music or hip-hop, youve undoubtedly heard samplers in use. In recent years, DJ's have used samplers to add sound effects to their mix. Such effects range from simple sounds like laser guns and bombs to more complex passages, such as a radio stations identification or the DJs name. Torqs Sampler lets you do the same. Due to its tight integration with the Decks, you can also record loops that stay synchronized to your mix. You can record and layer a song on top of itself, or play other loops in sync with your music. This is very effective when using the Sampler with various drum and percussion loops. You can create your own drum patterns to layer with your mix for added emphasis, or to keep the beat flowing during a breakdown in the music. Torq has 18 individual Sample Slots, each capable of recording and playing back a single audio sample. Below, youll learn the how to use the various controls in the Sampler along with techniques for capturing perfect loops.

Signal Source
Before you can record a sample, you must choose an audio source to sample from. When using Torq, this is as simple as engaging the PFL (headphone icon) on a Mixer channel. When you do this, youll hear that channel in your headphones and it will also be routed to the Sampler. In this instance, the Headphone Volume slider also acts as the Recording Level adjustment for the Sampler. This routing scheme has two benefits. First, you can record a sample from an audio source that your audience cannot hear. For example, you could record a vocal break from your next song and play it to hint at the track youre about to play. Secondly, you can record from more than one source at a time. If you enable the PFL on multiple Mixer channels, their signals will be mixed together for sampling as a whole. The idea when making any type of digital recording is to record the sound as loud as possible, but not so loud that it causes distortion. Torq includes a limiter on the PFL, so you wont have to worry if the sound youre recording has a few loud peaks.

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Sampler Controls

Sampler Controls

This section provides an overview of the controls within the Sampler.

Record Sample Button


Samples can be categorized into two groups: one-shot samples and loops. One-shot samples are sounds that play once when you trigger them and are not automatically synchronized to your mix. Loops are samples that will play repeatedly when the end of the sample is reached, playback will return to the beginning. Torq will play these loops in sync with the Master Tempo, allowing you to use multiple loops from different sources all at once. The method in which you use the Samplers Record button will determine whether you record a loop or one-shot sample:
Recording One-Shot Samples:

Click the Pre-Fader Listen (PFL) button in the Mixer to choose the source of the sample. The button will light up.
1 2

Click the RECORD button in the sampler-cell you want to record to. The button will turn red to indicate that Torq is recording.

Record button

When the Record button is pressed again, the sampler-cell is taken out of record mode, and the recording will stop. The sample is now ready to play.

Recording Looped Samples:


1 To record a loop instead of a one-shot, press and hold SHIFT while clicking on the Record button. Instead of beginning recording immediately, recording will wait for the downbeat (determined by the phase information of the source Deck). The Record button will be yellow while its waiting for the downbeat. Once the downbeat is reached, the button will turn red and recording will commence.

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Clicking the Record button again while recording will not stop recording immediately. Instead, recording will continue until the end of the next bar (again, determined by phase information from the source Deck). The Record button will be yellow while its waiting for the end of the bar (the Sampler will be recording during this time). Once the end of the bar is reached, recording will stop and the loop will be ready to play (loop will be white).

Loop Button

Loop Sample Button


This button enables and disables sample looping. When active, the sample will automatically re-trigger when it reaches its end. The looping will be synchronized with the Master Tempo. When deactivated, the sample will be triggered as a one-shot. This means the sample will play only once when triggered.
If you wish to use samples already on your hard drive (as opposed to recording them in Torq), the sample will need to be cut to an even bar length in order for the loop to play properly. You will need to use an external audio editor to cut the loop if its not already trimmed to the proper length.

Play Sample Button

Sampler

Pressing this button plays the corresponding sample. One-shot and looped samples exhibit slightly different behaviors:
Playing One-Shot Samples:

Click the Play Sample button. The button turns white and the sample will play. During playback, a progress bar (behind the sample name) will fill from left to right. When the sample ends, the button will deactivate.
1

If the Play Sample button is clicked while the sample is already playing, the playback position will immediately return to the beginning of the sample.
2 3 To stop sample playback before the sample ends, hold the SHIFT key on your computer keyboard and click the Sample Play button.

Triggering Looped Samples:


1

Click the Sample Play button. The sample will start playing in sync with the Master Tempo set by the Master Deck or Rewire Host (see Chapter 13, Rewire). If you trigger the sample at a point other than the downbeat, the sample will jump to the proper playback location in order to remain in sync with the Master Tempo. To stop the loop, click the Trigger button again. The loop will stop immediately.

2 3

To stop the loop immediately, hold the Shift key while clicking the Trigger button. The loop will stop immediately when clicked.
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Sample Gain Knob


Each sampler-cell has its own gain control allowing you to mix multiple samples together with appropriate levels. Click and drag up and down on this knob, or user your mouse wheel to change the sample playback volume. Hold SHIFT and click on the knob to reset the volume to unity (the original sample volume).

Sample Pitch
Sample Pitch Knob
This knob adjusts the playback speed of a one-shot sample, or will scale the playback rate of a looped sample. When using one-shot samples, the Speed knob will set the playback speed/pitch for the sample. When the knob is set at 12 oclock, the sample will play at its original speed.

Pitch Double/Halve
When using looped samples, the Sample Pitch knob changes to a pop-up menu which lets you double or halve the playback rate in order to remain in sync with the Master Tempo. The available choices are labelled as /2 (Half), x1(default or regular speed), and X2 (Double).

Naming Scheme for Recorded Samples


Each time you record a sample, Torq will give it the name SampleXXX.wav where XXX is an automatically generated number. The number will increment every time you create a new sample, regardless of which Sampler you use for the recording. The first sample you record will be named Sample001.wav. The next sample that is recorded will be named Sample002.wav, and so on. This numbering can be reset to start at 001 within the Torq Preferences menu (see Reset Sample Counter on page 112). You can also rename any recorded sample using the Rename Sample function which is detailed later in this section.

Sample Name Window


The Sample Name window serves multiple purposes: It will display the name of the sample file loaded into the slot. The background of this window will fill from left to right as the sample plays, like a progress meter. Clicking on this window will display a pop-up menu with the following options:

Load
Choosing this option will open a standard dialog box. Use this dialog to navigate to your hard drive and locate a sample. If you load a sample into a slot that already has a sample loaded, the current sample will be immediately replaced.

Unload
Choosing this option will remove the current sample from the sampler.

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Save
Choosing this option opens a standard Save dialog box. Use this dialog to name the current sample and save it to a specific location. The new name will also be displayed in the Sample Name window.

Rename
Once youve recorded a sample, you can rename it from the generic SampleXXX naming format automatically applied to new samples. Choosing this option from the pop-up menu opens a save dialog window. Type the new sample name the file name box, the choose the file format you want to use for the sample, and click Save. in a new name for the sample. The original audio file for the sample will be renamed.
If you wish to keep a copy with the original audio file with the original name, choose Save from the pop-up menu to do a Save As.The Torq samples folder will list both the original and new versions. See Save on page 101.

Load Bank
This option will allow you to load samples into all 18 sampler-cells at the same time. Choosing this option opens a standard dialog box that looks only for .tsb (Torq Sample Bank) files. Browse your hard drive and select a .tsb file. Torq will read this file and load the required sample files into the appropriate slots. It will then set the playback parameters for each sample.
This operation replaces all currently loaded samples. If you want to keep the current configuration, use the Save Bank feature (below) to save the current set of samples, before loading the new bank.

This operation will replace any samples that are currently loaded into the Sampler. If you want to keep the current configuration, save the bank (using the procedure below) before loading a new bank.

Save Bank
Once you have built a collection of samples (drum loops of a particular style, or a collection of vocal stabs, for example), you can save the collection as a sample bank. Choosing this option from the menu opens a standard Save dialog box which saves a proprietary Sample Bank file. This file references the samples currently loaded into the Sampler. Browse to your hard drive and choose a location to save the file. The file will be saved with the extension .tsb (Torq Sample Bank). A folder will also be created (of the same name) but with the word Samples added to the end. This Samples folder contains copies of the samples used in the bank for easy recall in the future.

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Loading Samples onto Decks (QuickScratch)


Loading a sample onto a Deck lets you control a sample using the variable-speed and variable-key engine within the Deck. This means you can scratch the sample using the mouse or qualified hardware controller.

Assign to Deck Buttons

Deck Buttons

Each Torq Sampler has 4 Assign to Deck buttons (A, B, C, and D) that correspond to each Deck. Clicking one of them loads the sample onto the corresponding Deck. For example, pressing the A button on Sampler 3 loads the sample onto Deck A. In this instance, the A button on each of the remaining samplers will be greyed out. You can then manipulate the sample in the same manner used for full songs. Pressing the Assign to Deck button again unloads the sample from the deck and reloads the original song.
Clicking all four Assign to Deck buttons on a sampler-cell loads the sample onto each or the four Decks. In Two-Deck Mode each sampler-cell has two assign to deck buttons (B and C). However, they function in exactly the same manner.

Looping a QuickScratch
If a one-shot sample is used as a QuickScratch, the sample will not be looped when loaded onto the Deck. If a looped sample is used as a QuickScratch, the sample will be looped when loaded onto the Deck so that it will play indefinitely. If you change the deck assignment by clicking an Assign to Deck button in a different Sampler while using the QuickScratch feature on a Deck, the sample used in the Deck will be updated immediately. For example, if you have a sample loaded on Deck A from sampler-cell 13, and you press the A button on sampler-cell 5, Deck A will update and play the new sample.

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Chapter 10: Snapshots

A Snapshot is a virtual picture of Torq settings. You can configure the controls and effects in Torq as you like, then save all those settings in a Snapshot that you can recall instantaneously. Torq enables you to make a virtually unlimited list of Snapshots, all with unique control parameters, and sort them in the Snapshot list. For example, you can remix the song using loops and QuickCues, adjust the sound using effects and EQ, and add samples to the mix. Torqs innovative Snapshot system allows you to perform multiple tasks with the push of a button or two.

Snapshot List
Press the Tab key on your keyboard or clicking the Snapshots heading in the Browser Index, opens the Snapshot List on the right side of the Browser. The list has multiple columns, like the File List, and each row represents one Snapshot. Press the Tab key again or click the Database heading within thew Index to return to the Database.

Creating a Snapshot
To create a new Snapshot, click the Add Snapshot button located above the Index or the Take Snapshot button located in the Torq Toolbar. Torq will immediately create a new Snapshot entry and the name will be highlighted so that you can type in a proper name for the Snapshot. Type in something you can remember and press Enter. You can always rename the Snapshot by double-clicking its name and typing in a new one.

Add Snapshot Button

Take Snapshot Button

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Masking a Snapshot
Each Snapshot you create contains the settings of almost every Torq component. This in formation includes the Key setting of a Deck, the EQ settings in the Mixer (including the state of the EQ Kills), the channel gains and volumes, the Crossfader position, and the contents and settings of the built-in Effect Racks. You can therefore have a Snapshot that will update all of these parameters at once, if you wish.
VST effects and their setting are not saved within Snapshots

More often than not, however, youll want to only override a portion of your current settings using a Snapshot. For example, you may want to recall the settings of one effect rack while leaving all other settings (channel volumes, EQs, etc.) as they currently are. This is the purpose of masking, which allows only particular portions of the Snapshot to be used. Each column in the Snapshot List corresponds to certain portions of the Torq interface. Youll find columns for Deck A, Deck B, Deck C, Desk D, Key, FX, EQ Kills, EQ knobs, Crossfader, Channel Volumes, and Gains. When you create a new Snapshot, these columns will be blank. As a result, nothing will happen when you trigger the Snapshot. The way to enable the Snapshot is to place check boxes in these columns to indicate what portions of the interface youd like the Snapshot to control. For example, if you put a check box in the Deck B column, the Snapshot will use the information for the left side of the interface. You can check Deck C or Deck D instead, if you wish the Snapshot to only affect the right side of the interface. Check them both and the entire interface can be updated with the Snapshot. Once youve selected which Deck(s) should be controlled by the Snapshot, place additional check boxes in the columns corresponding to the parameters youd like to control. For example, if you check the Deck B and EQ knobs columns, only the EQ knobs on the left side of the mixer will be updated when the Snapshot is triggered. Any other settings (the current key of the song, any effects in the Effect Racks, etc.) will remain unchanged. If you were to also check the EQ Kills and Key columns, the Decks Key setting will be updated by the Snapshot, along with the EQ Kills, too. Checking all of the columns and all parameters within the Snapshot will override the current settings. When you release the Snapshot, all previous settings will be restored.

Using Snapshots
The second column in the Snapshot list is labeled Assignment and contains the name of the current keyboard key or MIDI note assigned to the Snapshot. This column will contain the word Unassigned when you make a new Snapshot. Click Unassigned and the message Press A Key will appear, indicating that Torq is waiting for your key assignment. Press a key on your computers keyboard, or trigger a MIDI note on your external controller, and Torq will immediately assign it to the Snapshot. For example if you have assigned the C key on your keyboard to the Snapshot the letter C will be listed in the Assignment column for that snapshot. Now, the Snapshot will be activated any time you press the assigned key. If you want to assign a different key or note, click on the Assignment listing, in this case the letter C, and the Press A Key instruction will reappear.
Due to the large number of Snapshots you may create while using Torq, you can to use modifier keys when making assignments. For example, you can assign the W key, SHIFT + W, WTRL + W, and ALT + W to different Snapshotsyou can even use multiple modifiers, like SHIFT + ALT+ W.

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Duplicate Snapshot

Duplicate Snapshot button

Click on a Snapshot in the list to select it, then click the Duplicate Snapshot button. Another Snapshot will appear in the list, but this one will contain an exact copy of the parameters from the previously selected Snapshot. You can give the duplicate a new name, then select different masking parameters to make the Snapshot behave differently. Assign a different key to this Snapshot, and you can fire off either with ease.

Swapping Snapshots
Frequently, you may find that a Snapshot set up for one deck would be useful for another or vice versa. For example, you may have created a Snapshot which loads a Delay effect while also killing the Low EQ on Deck A. Torq allows you to swap the left and right assignment of Snapshots to do this easily. To start with, duplicate the Snapshot as described abovea copy of the Snapshot will appear in the list. Give this new Snapshot a new name (i.e. if the original Snapshot was called HP Delay A, you might rename it to HP Delay C). Once youve created the new duplicate, place check marks in the Swap and Deck C columns and remove the check mark from the Deck A column. This will essentially take any assignments made to Deck A and now apply them to Deck C when using this Snapshot.

Delete Snapshot

Delete Snapshot button

To delete a snapshot, choose a Snapshot from the list, and then click the Delete Snapshot.

Momentary vs. Latching Behavior


By default, a Snapshot will only be active as long as you hold the assigned key. As soon as you release the key, the Snapshot is deactivated and all previous settings are restored. This is excellent for simply punching in little tweaks and effects that you only use for a few moments at a time. If you place a check box in the Latch column of the Snapshot list, the Snapshot will become active when you press the assigned key until you press the same key again. This mode lets you recall a setting that you want to leave active for a while, such as a special stutter pattern that you created using multiple Strobe effects.

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Polyphonic Snapshots
This feature lets you trigger multiple Snapshots at the same time. You can, for example, trigger one Snapshot that cuts the bass and boosts the treble on Deck A while triggering another that detunes the track on Deck B. Whenever you activate a Snapshot, a check mark will appear in the Active column. If you trigger another Snapshot with duplicate settings (for example, both Snapshots triggering have FX checked), the last Snapshot triggered will take precedence. Youll also notice that the green check mark in the FX column of the first Snapshot will turn red, indicating the parameter is overridden by the other Snapshot. As soon as you deactivate the second Snapshot, the red check will turn green again, indicating that the parameter in the first Snapshot is in use again.

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Chapter 11: Synchronization

At most of todays dance clubs and events, the DJ will mix the songs together using a technique called beat-matching. The goal is to fade the volumes between two songs while keeping them perfectly in time with one another. If done properly, the audience will never have to stop dancing as the beat of one song blends in with the new song. DJ's will do this for hours at a time, creating one gigantic non-stop mix from the individual songs they have in their collection. Proper execution of this technique requires the mastery of two tasks: matching tempo and matching phase.

Automatic Tempo and Phase Detection


As mentioned before, tempo is the measurement of the speed of a song expressed in beats per minute (BPM). Phase refers to the location within a song in reference to its downbeat. Torq automatically determines the tempo and phase of a song when you load it onto a Deck, so matching tempos is as simple as moving the Speed slider on a Deck until the BPM Display shows the same value as the other Deck. If youre using external vinyl or CD control, you can adjust the speed of the song using the turntables or CD players pitch adjuster. Once you have matched the tempos of two songs, you need to start both songs at precisely the right moment, or in-phase with each other. When beat-matching songs, youll normally want the downbeats of both songs aligned with each other. When aligned properly, the beats of both songs will blend together into one larger beat. If the songs are misaligned or out-of-phase, it will sound terrible as the beats of the two songs will be playing at different times. Torqs scrolling waveforms in the Waveform Display will help you match the phases of the two songs. Not only can you visually align the transients in the waveforms, you can also use the Phase Grid for automatic synchronization.

Phase Grid Manipulations


Torq places a Phase Grid over the Scrolling Waveforms to help you see where the beats are, even during a breakdown or rhythmless intro of a song. In order for the automatic synchronization to work, the Phase Grid needs to be properly aligned with the music. With the Phase Grids of both songs aligned properly, Torq will be able to sync the two songs together. Torq will attempt to place the Phase Grid in the proper location during song analysis. If Torq positions the Grid incorrectly, it will be up to you to re-align it to the proper beat.

Mis-Aligned Phase Grid

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When a mis-alignment occurs (as seen above), youll see that the grid does not line up with the beginnings of the beats (transients) in the waveform. In the example, the Phase Grid is too early, leaving a gap between the grid lines and the transients in the waveform. There are a number of ways to fix a mis-aligned Phase Grid. Which method you choose to use will probably depend on whether youre comfortable using the mouse and keyboard, or whether you prefer to use external MIDI control. The results are all the same, so choose whichever feels good for you.
If the song youre attempting to use has tempo variations, Torqs automatic beat and phase detection will not work. You will have to manually set the tempo for the song using Tempo Anchors as detailed in Chapter 3 before you will be able to exploit Torqs automatic synchronization.

Adjusting with the Mouse


To adjust the Phase Grid placement with the mouse:
1 2 3

Hold down the Shift key, then click-and-drag left or right with the mouse. The Phase Grid will move left or right, following your mouse movements.

Once you have aligned the thicker downbeat marker of the grid to the downbeat of the music, release the mouse button.

Effects Rack Bypass Button

You can turn on Caps Lock instead of holding Shift if you need to adjust the grid using just one hand. Turn off Caps Lock when youre finished so you can regain proper control of the waveforms.

Adjusting with Nudge Buttons


Hold down the Shift key, then click on one of the Nudge buttons. The Phase Grid will move left or right depending on which Nudge button you click. Use the buttons to align the thicker downbeat marker of the grid to the downbeat of the music.

Adjusting with Advance Buttons


Hold down the Shift key, then click on one of the Advance buttons. Instead of making a small change to the Phase Grid, this will have the effect of moving the grid an entire beat left or right. This is a quick way to fix the Phase Grid if it happens to be aligned to the beats but has the downbeat in the wrong location.

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Sync Button
Pressing the Sync button automatically synchronizes a Decks tempo to match the Master Deck or Master Tempo. This aligns the song to the phase of the Master Deck or Master Tempo. While Sync is active, the Deck will be affected by tempo changes made by the Master Deck or Master Tempo. If you slow down the Master Deck, the other Deck will also slow down. If you attempt to scratch or re-align the second Deck, Torq will automatically snap it back into alignment to match the phase of the Master Deck.
For more information about automatic and manual Master Deck selection, refer to Auto Master Deck on page 51. Momentary Sync

When you turn Sync off on a Deck, it will keep the tempo setting allowing the song to keep playing in time with the other Deck. However, Torq will no longer attempt to keep the two Decks in sync if you make changes to them. Torq will no longer snap the songs back into alignment if you move one of them, nor will Torq continue to match tempos if you change them. So with the other deck set as the Master Deck, if you just need to synchronize for a moment and wish for the music to run freely afterward, click the Sync button once to turn it on, then click it again to turn it back offthe Tempo will be matched to the other Deck, and youll be free to start and manipulate the music as you wish.
Master Tempo

Using the Sync button as described in Chapter 5, The Decks lets you sync the Decks to the Master Tempo set by the Master Deck or a Rewire Host such as Pro Tools (see Chapter 13, Rewire). However, if you do not have an active Master Deck and you wish to synch your looped samples to your mix, youll need to use the Master Tempo controls to set the Master Tempo. When you adjust the Master Tempo then click the Sync button on a Deck, it will sync to the Master Tempo instead of one of the other Decks. Additionally, when you trigger looped samples, those loops will play in sync with the Master Tempo (and any synced Decks). Changing the Master Tempo will result in the same change to the synced Decks and the Sampler. There are a couple ways to adjust the Master Tempo: Use the + and buttons to increment or decrement the current tempo by one BPM. or Hold the Shift key while dragging up and down on the Master Tempo Display to make smoother, slower changes to the tempo. or Click repeatedly on the Master Tempo Display to tap a new tempo.
This synchronization method is only available when Auto Master Deck is switched off and you do not have a manually selected Master Deck set up as described in Chapter 5, The Decks under Master Button on page 51.

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Master Tempo LEDs

Master Tempo LEDs

To the right of the Master Tempo display in the Torq toolbar is a row of 4 LEDs (one green and three red). These will illuminate in succession (creating a chase pattern) that will indicate the Master Tempos position within a bar, with the green light signifying the first beat of a bar.

Master Tempo Metronome


Clicking the Headphone button to the left of the Master Tempo LEDs, lets you hear the metronome in your headphones. The sound of the Metronome can is not recorded into the Sampler, or heard by your audience.

Auto Master Deck Selection


By default, Torq 2.0 automatically chooses which deck will be the Master Deck, based on which deck has been playing the longest while routed to the Master Output. The tempo and beat position of the Master Deck controls the tempo and beat position of any slave/synced deck. This means, all tempo based Torq functions and Looped samples will follow its tempo even if there are tempo changes (set with Tempo Anchors). Pressing the AUTO button in the Torq Toolbar deactivates and activates Auto Master Deck.

AUTO Button

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Chapter 12: Torq Preferences

The Torq preferences let you change the default settings for various functions within the application.

Torq Preferences Icon

Clicking the Preferences icon in the Torq Toolbar opens the preferences dialogue, which has seven tabs labelled Audio, MIDI, External, VST, Behavior, Locations, and GUI. Each preference page offers various options which can be chosen from the popup menus listed. Along the lower edge of the preference pane are buttons for accessing the Setup Wizard (see Chapter 3, Torq 2.0 Configuration), Controller Assignments Page, and the Licensing page Activating and de-activating Torq (see Activation on page 5).

Audio Preferences

Audio Preferences

This page determines how audio is routed and processed within Torq.

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General
Timestretch Algorithm
This section chooses the type of Time-stretching method used by Torq, based on two options:
Standard

This is Torqs default time-stretching algorithm which is suitable for making small changes in Key or Speed. However using performing drastic changes to an song will result in audio artifacts.
Elastique Transient

This algorithm is better suited for making more drastic changes to pitch and key and yields very few audio artifacts. Although this setting offers higher sound quality, it is more CPU intensive and therefore more suitable for faster computers.

AutoGain Target (RMS)


This setting lets you choose a gain reduction level that sets the Channel Gain knobs to a position which maintains a volume of 0dB RMS for a song that is loaded onto a Deck. This ensures that the volume levels of all tracks are even before doing a mix.

Mixer Mode
This option lets you to switch between Internal and External Mixer mode.
Internal

This is the default setting where Torqs on-screen mixer is used to blend the signals from the Decks. When this option is selected you will be able to set channel assignments as describe in Internal Mixer Mode Channel Assignments on page 115.
External

This will bypass the Torq mixer and route each Deck to its own output pair on your audio interface. These individual stereo outputs can then be connected to your favorite DJ mixer in the same manner as two turntables or CDJs. Once you have set the channel assignments described in External Mixer Mode Channel Assignments on page 116, you can mix and cue your tracks using your DJ mixer instead of Torqs Mixer.

Reset Sample Counter


Each new audio file recorded by the Sampler is assigned a name with the format of SampleXXX.wav, where XXX is a three-digit number. The numbers start at 001 and increase regardless of which Sampler-Cell is used. Clicking the Reset button restarts the Sample Counter so that the sample numbers start at 001 again.

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Hardware
Audio Device
This preference lets you choose which audio interface to use with Torq from a list of properly installed and connected devices.

Sample Rate
The sample rate determines sound quality of Torq depending on the source material you are playing. This setting lets you choose a sample rate of either 44,100 (default) or 48,000. Although the higher sample rate offer better sound quality it does place heavier demands on your computer. It is recommended to sample the sample rate only as high as you need it to be. If you only play MP3 files or songs from CD's, you should leave the sample rate as 44,100 since this is the sample rate used by MP3s and CD's.

HW Buffer Size (in Samples)


This parameter can cause a lot of confusion for some users, but is actually not that complicated. To understand how the buffer size affects the performance of Torq, you must understand a little bit about how your computer processes audio. Multi-tasking is a term that refers to doing multiple jobs all at once. Its what allows your computer to run more than one program at a time (i.e. listening to iTunes while surfing the Web). While it looks like the computer is doing two separate things at once, its actually notits still doing only one task at a time, but changing between tasks faster than you can see. This provides for a streamlined computing experience, but creates a problem when using audio applications. Audio is non-stopa 5-minute song will play for 5 minutes without interruption. So how can the computer keep audio playing while its jumping around to do other tasks? The answer is buffering. An audio buffer is a temporary storage tank that can hold a brief moment of audio. The computer will fill the audio buffer with music then let the buffer play while it does other things (like update the clock on your screen, check your network connections, monitor RAM usage, etc.). When all things work properly, the computer will complete its other tasks and fill the buffer with more data before the buffer empties, thus resulting in perfect audio while multi-tasking. If the audio buffer happens to empty before the computer can fill it with more data, the audio playback will stop until the computer can fill the buffer again. These dropouts happen very quickly, not sounding like prolonged gaps of silence, but sounding more like clicks and pops or otherwise distorted audio. When this happens, the solution is to either lighten the CPU load (by closing unnecessary applications or processes that are wasting the computers time) or by increasing the size of the audio buffer, allowing it to play longer (thus giving the computer enough time to perform its other tasks). So why not just go with a large buffer size and avoid dropouts? The problem is that increasing the buffer size increases the system latency. Latency is the time between when you tell the computer to do something (such as activating an EQ Kill) and when you actually hear the results from the speakers. If you have a large audio buffer, the buffer will have to play out its entire contents before youll hear any new EQ changes in the audio. When DJing, this can be a nightmare if youre trying to do things with accurate timingall of your actions will have a delayed effect on the music.

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The solution is to set the buffer size as low as it can go without inducing any audio problems. This is just like playing a game of limbo.
To find the appropriate buffer size:
1 2

Load a song onto a Deck and play it. While the music is playing, open the Audio Preferences.

3 If music is playing back properly, open the Buffer Size menu and select the next smallest buffer size. The buffer will be updated immediately and the music will continue to play.

Listen to the music for a moment. If you do not hear any clicks, pops, or glitches, lower the Buffer Size to the next lowest setting.
4 5 6

Keep repeating this procedure until can hear the audio breaking up.

Set the Buffer Size to the next highest setting (the last one that worked properly) and your system will be optimized. While Torq should be very stable at these settings, keep in mind that the system performance can be compromised as you increase the CPU load. This is most notable when using CPU-intensive VST effects or the Elastique Time Stretch algorithm. Loading one of these effects may cause pops and clicks in your audio, at which point you will have to increase the buffer size until the audio is clean again.
Using some external VST effects can introduce additional audio buffering (latency) within the Torq application. When this happens, your manipulations of the Decks will seem sluggish. This is a side effect of the VST plug-in being used and not related to this buffer setting.

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Auto Detect Audio/MIDI Devices


When this option is enabled, Torq automatically sets the Audio and MIDI interface options to those of any qualified M-Audio or third party controller and interface connected to your computer. This ensures proper operation of Torq with connected devices.
Leave this option turned off if you do not want Torq to replace custom mappings for your controllers or special assignments for your audio interface with default settings.

Channel Assignments
Each Mixer mode offers a unique set of options which let you assign the outputs of Torq to the channels of the selected audio interface. The options for each Mixer mode are explained below:

Internal Mixer Mode Channel Assignments


Master Buss Output Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo output pair for the Torq Master Output. This is the output you will connect to the speakers. Cue Buss Output Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo output pair for cueing (or pre-listening)

to the output of a Deck. This is the output for the headphones.


Line Input A Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input pair for use as the Line Input for

Channel A of the Mixer.


Line Input B Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input pair for use as the Line Input for

Channel B of the Mixer.


Line Input C Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input pair for use as the Line Input for

Channel C of the Mixer.


Line Input D Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input pair for use as the Line Input for Channel D of the Mixer. Control Input A Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input to which your first turntable or CD player is connected. Control Input B Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input to which your second turntable or

CD player is connected.
Control Input C Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input to which your third turntable or

CD player is connected.
Control Input D Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input to which your fourth turntable or

CD player is connected.

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External Mixer Mode Channel Assignments


Whenever Torq is switched to External Mixer mode the available options for outputs and inputs change to those listed below:
Deck A Output Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo output for Deck A. This signal will not be

processed by Torqs Mixerit will be fed into a stereo channel of an external DJ mixer.
Deck B Output Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo output for Deck B. This signal will not be

processed by Torqs Mixerit will be fed into a stereo channel of an external DJ mixer.
Deck C Output Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo output for Deck C. This signal will not

be processed by Torqs Mixerit will be fed into a stereo channel of an external DJ mixer.
Deck D Output Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo output for Deck D. This signal will not be processed by Torqs Mixerit will be fed into a stereo channel of an external DJ mixer. Sampler Buss Output Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo output for Torqs Sampler. Line Input A Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input pair for use as the Line Input for

Channel A of the Mixer.


Line Input B Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input pair for use as the Line Input for

Channel B of the Mixer.


Line Input C Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input pair for use as the Line Input for Channel C of the Mixer. Line Input D Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input pair for use as the Line Input for Channel D of the Mixer. Control Input A Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input to which your first turntable or CD

player is connected.
Control Input B Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input to which your second turntable or

CD player is connected.
Control Input C Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input to which your third turntable or

CD player is connected.
Control Input D Click to access the pop-up menu and select the stereo input to which your fourth turntable or

CD player is connected.
When Torq is being used as a ReWire slave the Audio Interface options will be disabled.

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MIDI Preferences

MIDI Preferences

This page features options which let you determine how Torq is controlled via MIDI.

MIDI Devices
This list shows all MIDI devices currently recognized by Torq. Each device is listed by name and is followed by a pop-up menu for setting the device as being Inactive or Active. If you wish to use a device to control Torq, choose Active from the corresponding pop-up menu. Choose Inactive for any controller you do not wish to use with Torq. This section of the MIDI Preference page lists

Refresh MIDI Device List


When this button is pressed Torq will detect all \qualified MIDI controllers that have been properly installed and connected to your computer. A warning screen will appear asking you to confirm that you want Torq to start the detection process. Once this process has completed Torq will refresh the list of available MIDI devices.

Internal
Platter Tolerance
This setting lets you calibrate Torq for use with various qualified motor-driven hardware MIDI platters. This helps the program match the level of precision expected by the hardware. The available choices range from Low to Very High. For example, youre using a Numark NS7 you would choose the Low tolerance setting, and High if youre using a Denon S3700.
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Scratch Sensitivity
This option determines how rapidly a Deck will respond to messages sent from a MIDI controller. It is designed for controllers that move the waveform back and forth, typically those with jog wheels. Higher values make the Decks respond quicker, while lower values make the Decks less responsive.
This setting has no effect on External Control with Vinyl or CD's

DJ oriented MIDI controllers with turntable platters vary in how they handle scratching and nudging. Certain products only control nudging, while others (such as M-Audio Xponent) can control both nudging and scratching. Refer to the products user guide to learn if each turntable platter is capable of sending out both MIDI note and CC information. If so, you can assign each turntables MIDI note and CC commands to the corresponding Main Waveform Display in Torq using the procedure described in MIDI Control on page 148. If your turntable can only send out MIDI CC information but not MIDI note data (i.e., the turntable is not touch sensitive), then you will only be able to control nudging. Assign the turntables MIDI CC output to control the corresponding Main Waveform Display in Torq using the MIDI Learn feature.
Refer to Chapter 14, External and MIDI Control for more information about MIDI Learn.

Nudge Sensitivity
This setting allows you to adjust Torqs sensitivity to nudging or gradually slipping the phase of one deck to match the phase of the other deck. By default this parameter is set to 5. Increasing the number causes the Decks to nudge tracks more rapidly, while lower values cause the Decks to nudge tracks more gradually.

External
MIDI Clock Out/In - Phase Offset
These two parameters are used to adjust the timing between Torq and the external MIDI devices. If Torq is following the MIDI Clock from an external device, use the MIDI Clock In Phase Offset option to align Torq. If Torq is transmitting MIDI Clock to an external device, use the MIDI Clock Out Phase Offset option to align the external device to Torq.

MIDI Stop Behavior


This preference determines how Torq reacts when receiving a MIDI Stop command from an external device.
STOP (default) When set to Stop, Torq will stop all Decks and Samples upon receiving MIDI Stop. FREEWHEEL When set to Freewheel, Torq will continue to play, essentially ignoring the MIDI Stop command,

allowing the DJ set to continue after stopping the external device.


Holding down Shift while clicking the Send MBC Downbeat button (exclamation mark icon) in the Torq Toolbar, sends a MIDI Stop command which stops all decks.

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MBC (MIDI Beat Clock)


Torqs Master Tempo can be slaved to an external device that transmits MIDI Beat Clock (called MBC in Torq). In this instance, the Master Tempo which controls all aspects of Torq (the Sampler and synced Decks) will follow the MIDI Beat Clock. Torq can also transmit its Master Tempo as MIDI Beat Clock so that other MIDI equipment can synchronize with it. External drum machines, groove boxes, synths, etc. than can receive MIDI Clock will follow Torqs Master Tempo. Refer to the documentation for your hardware for further information about their MIDI clock capabilities. In order to use these MBC features, you need to have a MIDI interface connected to your computer. Some M-Audio DJ products, such as Xponent, have a MIDI interface built into them. If you do not have a MIDI interface on your product (or are already using them for connections to other devices), you need to add one to your computer such as the M-Audio UNO USB MIDI interface. The complete range of M-Audio MIDI interfaces can be found on our website at www.avid.com.

Applications for MBC


Here are some possible applications for MIDI Beat Clock.
External Drum Machine

Dance music is dance music thanks to the drums. You can make your DJ sets even more dance-heavy by layering your own custom beats on the fly with an external drum machine. Add extra kick drums and hi-hats. Double-up a snare drum with a hand clap. Create drum fills where none existed before. Simply slave the drum machine to Torq using MIDI Beat Clock and it will play in time with the Master Tempo, even if you change the Master Tempo.
External Synth/Sequencer

Beats are easy to add, but you may want to take it to the next level and actually add your own synth parts on top of your mixes. New bass lines. Sound effects. Rapid-fire sequencer patterns. Simply slave the external sequencer to Torq and youre ready to go.
Swapping DJ's

If youre in the middle of a Torq set and another Torq DJ is ready to play after you, you can transmit your Master Tempo to that DJ allowing him to sync up everything on his computer to yours for automatically beat-matched transitions between DJ's. If youre the first DJ, set your computer to output MBC and set the Deck youre using for the last song in your set as the Master Deck. If youre the second DJ, set your computer to receive MBC and adjust your Master Tempo to the one set by the previous DJ. Your computer will now be in sync with the other DJ. If youre the second DJ, you should also set your MIDI Stop preference to Freewheel to ensure that Torq doesnt stop when the first DJ presses stop on his system.
Dual-DJ

If one DJ could sync the beginning of his set up to the end of another DJs set, then why not sync up the entire length of both your sets? By sharing MIDI Beat Clock between two computers running Torq, two DJ's can sync themselves together and create a massive 4-Deck mixing extravaganza.

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Torq and Rewire

Torqs ReWire capabilities allow it to be run alongside applications such as Pro Tools or Ableton Live on the same computer. MIDI Clock will allow you to sync up the two applications across two computers. While you wont be able to transfer audio from Torq to the other application without making additional audio interface connections, you can at least get both programs to run in sync with each other. Then, adding clips in Live or tracks in Torq will result in one synchronized performance between both computers.

Setting Up MBC Input


To slave Torqs Master Tempo to an external MIDI device:
1 2

Connect the MIDI Output of the external device to a MIDI Input on your computer.

In Torqs MIDI Preferences, select the MIDI Input port mentioned above as the MBC Input. Close the Preferences.

3 Click the AUTO button in Torqs Toolbar to disable Auto Master Deck. Torqs Master Tempo will run independently until an incoming MIDI Clock is received.

Enable transmission of MIDI Clock from your external device. Please refer to the products user manual for the proper method of doing this.
4 5 6

Start the external device (possibly by pressing Play or Run).

The Master Tempo display will change to match the tempo of the external device. The Master Tempo LEDs in the Torq Toolbar will also flash in time with the external device.

Setting Up MBC Output


To slave an external MIDI device to Torq:
1

Connect a MIDI cable from the MIDI Output from your computer to the MIDI Input of the external MIDI device.

In Torqs MIDI Preferences, select a MIDI Output port as the MBC Output and close the Preferences. At this point the MIDI out indicator will glow red.
2

Midi Out Indicator


3

On your external MIDI device, enable reception of MIDI Clock. Refer to the products user manual for further instructions.

On some external devices, youll need to put it into a standby mode where it waits for MIDI Clock before it starts to run. This may require pressing Play or Runplease check with the products user manual to see if this is required.

In Torq, enable Auto Master Deck by clicking the AUTO button in the Toolbar or manually select a Master Deck by clicking its Master button. Torq will transmit MIDI Clock at the tempo specified in the master Tempo Display in the Torq Toolbar, but the external devices will not run.

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To start the external devices, a MIDI Start command must be sent from Torq. This is done by clicking the Send MBC Downbeat icon (the exclamation mark) to the right of the MBC indicator in Torqs Toolbar. The button will momentarily turn white when clicked, indicating that Torq is waiting for the downbeat of the music youre playing.

Send MBC Downbeat Icon

When the downbeat arrives, Torq will transmit the MIDI Start command and the external device should begin to play. The Master Tempo LEDs will also begin to chase, indicating your current position within a bar.

MIDI LED Sync


When this setting is set to On (default) the buttons on your MIDI controller will blink in time the music to provide a visual representation on the current song tempo for a particular Deck. For example, if youre using an M-Audio Torq Xponent, the buttons on the left side of the controller will flash in time with its target Deck, while those on the right side will flash in time with the Deck controlled by thew right side of the controller.

External Meter
This setting determines which signal will be reflected in the level meter on your controller hardware. For example, with a Torq Xponent, with the Deck Volume (default) option selected the left side of the level meter will reflect the level of any Deck controlled by the left side of the hardware, while the meter on the right reflects the level of Decks controlled by thew right side. When you switch this setting to Master Volume your level meter will only display the signal from the Mixer Output. Using Torq Xponent as an example, both level meters will work in unison to reflect both sides of the stereo signal coming from the Mixer.

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External Preferences

External Preferences

This preference page contains options for configuring and calibrating Torq for use with control vinyl or control CDs when a Deck is switched to External Control Mode.
Further calibration instructions can be found under External Control Calibration on page 140.

Options
Skip Protection
When this option is set to Yes, Torq will maintain playback of the music even if the needle skips across the record. This works in a similar manner to Relative mode (the position of the needle will be ignored after it skips) but the music will not stop playing as soon as the needle leaves the control vinyl. When this happens, the song will continue to play for about half a second. If the needle makes contact with the vinyl again within that time, you will not hear the music stop.
If the tonearm bounces completely off the record, the music will stop. Skip Protection Button

Skip Protection

Skip Protection can also be switched on and off by clicking the Skip Protection button in the Torq Toolbar.

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Relative Mode
The following options determine how the Decks react to the position of the needle when they are switched to Relative Mode.
Refer to Relative Mode on page 142 for more information about how the Decks behave when set to Relative Mode. Normal

This is the default mode where Torq ignores the playback position of the Control Vinyl or Control CD. In this instance, only the direction and speed of the control source is monitored.
Absolute Rotation Angle

Choosing this option automatically activates Absolute Rotation Angle mode whenever a deck is switched from Absolute mode to Relative mode by clicking the ABS button on a Torq Deck.
Refer to Absolute Rotation Angle (ARA) on page 142 for more information.

Relative Speed Mode


These options determine whether or not Torq Decks are automatically switched to Relative Speed mode when they are under External Control.
Refer to Relative Speed Mode on page 143 for more information about how the Decks behave when set to Relative Mode. Off

This is the default setting, in which the Decks are not automatically switched to Relative Speed mode when set to External Control.
Automatic

This setting automatically switches the Decks to Relative Speed mode whenever they are under External Control.

Calibration
The settings in this category configure each input pair of Torq for use with external control vinyl or CD's. For vinyl control, you can use the Torq Control Vinyl or some versions of the Ms. Pinky control records.

Control Type (Gen1, Gen2, Gen3, Torq Vinyl, Torq CD)


This pop-up menu allows you to set the vinyl or CD control source to use for each Deck. To use the Torq Control Vinyl or Torq Control CD, select Torq Vinyl or Torq CD, respectively. Gen1, Gen2, and Gen3 are for use with Ms Pinky records generations 1, 2, and 3.

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Power Threshold
This parameter sets the minimum signal level required to make External Control work. If this setting is too low, quiet noises picked up by the turntable could be interpreted incorrectly as control signals. If this setting is too high, the Deck will not respond to the external control signals at slow speeds. This should be set as low as possible without introducing any anomalies.
Refer to External Control Calibration on page 140 for more information.

Lead In
Any practiced DJ knows that playing and scratching records will eventually destroy them. If the needle is exceptionally heavy or if you scratch in the same place a lot, the grooves in the record can be eaten away thus tarnishing the sound quality. This frequently happens at the beginning of records and is something DJ's call cue burn. With traditional records, cue burn was something to pay attention to because it didnt sound very good. When using control records like the Torq Vinyls, cue burn becomes a serious issue. This is due to the fact that you use the same two records to play every song in your set all the time and because Torq might not be able to track the motion in a section of the vinyl with cue burn. If youre using Absolute mode, every song will begin at the same place on the record (at the beginning). Constantly cueing and scratching in this area will eat away at the grooves on the Torq Vinyl. When using traditional records, spotting cue burn is easy: you hear it. It sounds like the record is really dirty (as if it had been scrubbed with sandpaper). However, when using the Torq Vinyl, you wont hear cue burn because Torq will still be playing pristine digital audio files. Instead of hearing the audio get scratchy when your control records start getting burned, youll find that Torqs ability to follow the control records is compromised. This usually manifests itself right at the beginning of each songthe music will jump around erratically. This is because Torq is unable to determine the proper location because the signal from the control records has been damaged. So, instead of hearing the audio get scratchy when your control records start getting burned, youll find that Torqs ability to follow the control records is compromised. This usually manifests itself right at the beginning of each songthe music will jump around erratically. This is because Torq is unable to determine the proper location because the signal from the control records has been damaged. The usual solution for this is to either flip the record over to the other side or, if youve already done that, to throw the record away and get a new one. However, using the Lead In option in the Preferences, you can extend the life of your control records. By default, Lead In is set to 0 which causes the music to start playing from the beginning of the record. Increasing Lean In to 1 will make the music wait for an additional rotation of the record before starting. So, when the start of the record gets burned, increase the Lead In by one value. Once that new location is burned, increase the Lead In again. Once youve burned both sides of the record with the Lead In set to 5, youll have to buy a replacement.

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Velocity
This row of boxes displays the current Velocity values for each Deck. The value indicates both speed and direction at the same time. When the Velocity is 0, the record or CD is stopped, or the needle is no longer in contact with the vinyl. If the number is 1.0, that means the vinyl record is running forward at normal speed (when using Torq Control Vinyls, this refers to 33 1/3 RPM playback on the turntable). When the number is -1.0, it means the record or CD is running backwards at normal speed (33 1/3 RPM). As you manipulate the record or CD by hand or with their pitch adjusters, the Velocity display immediately changes to reflect the movements.
Refer to External Control Calibration on page 140 for more information.

Position
This row of boxes displays a number that Torq uses to calculate the playback position for the audio file loaded onto each Deck. This value increases when the record or CD is playing forward, and decreases when playing backwards. The value will also jump whenever you lift the needle off the record and place it in another location (known as a needle drop). This allows Torq to play back a song just as if it was pressed right into the Control Vinyl or Control CD.
Refer to External Control Calibration on page 140 for more information.

Error Index
These boxes typically display a number between 0.15 and 1.50, which is perfectly normal. If the number is above 2.0, it will turn red, indicating that there is too much noise in the audio signal for Torq to properly track position and velocity.
Refer to Resolving Playback Issues on page 145, for more information.

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VST Preferences

VST Preferences

The VST Preference page lets you manage your VST plug-ins.

Directory
This option lets you manually set the location of the VST folder that Torq uses. When your click on the Browse button on the left side of the page, a new widow will open which allows you to navigate to the location of the VST directory. Once you have found it, click on it and then click Open (Mac) or Ok (Windows) The location of the VST directory will appear in the location line to the left the Browse button.

Scanning
Once you have selected your VST directory this section will tell you how many new VST plug-ins were found in that location. Clicking the Start button tells Torq to scan the folder for compatible plug-ins. During the scan, the VST Plug-in Scanner window will appear showing the plug-in that is currently being scanned and the progress of the scanning operation. You can control the scanning process by pressing the corresponding buttons to skip or ignore certain plug-ins at any time.

Ignored Plug-ins
This section displays a list of plug-in that were ignored by Torq, because either they are not supported, or because you had pressed the Skip or Ignore button during the scan. If you would like to have any of them re-scanned, you can highlight the individual plug-in listing, and then click Remove Selected. The plug-in will be removed from the list, and you can click the Start button under Scanning to start the scanning process.

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Behavior Preferences

Behavior Preferences

This page lets you set limits for functions as described below:

Mixing
Transport Mode
You can reverse the direction of the Nudge and Advance buttons in the Decks using this preference. By default, this option is set to Normal. In this mode, the left Nudge button advances the phase of the song, while the right Nudge buttons moves backwards. Normal mode also causes the left Advance button to reverse the track while the right Advance button moves it forwards. Setting this preference to Reverse cause these buttons to work in the opposite direction. The left Nudge button moves the phase of the song backwards, while the right Nudge buttons moves forwards. Reverse mode also causes the left Advance button to forward the track while the right Advance button moves rewinds it.
Choosing Reverse mode will not change the tooltip descriptions or names for the Nudge and Advance button shown on the lower edge of the Torq interface.

Cue Exclusivity
This option controls the behavior of the Cue buttons for all Decks. When this option is No (default), you can cue multiple channels at once. These Cue sources are mixed and heard through your headphones simultaneously. With each channel that is added to the Cue mix, the overall Cue bus volume will be attenuated by 3dB to keep it from clipping.

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When this option is set to Yes, pressing the Cue button on a channel causes the other Cue button on the other channel to switch off. This ensures that you are only hearing one audio source through your headphones at any given time.

EQ Low Frequency
This value sets the crossover point between the low and mid frequency range for the EQ controls on all Decks. The default setting is 250.0 Hz.

EQ High Frequency
This value sets the crossover point between the high and mid frequency range for the EQ controls on all Decks. The default setting is 5200.0 Hz.

Effect Signal Flow


Selecting the Chain option causes Torq to automatically set up effects chains as described in Amount Knob (AMT) on page 80, and Effects Chains - Chain Mode on page 81.

Traq Morph Filter Style


This parameter determines the frequency range used by the Traq Morph Frequency algorithm.
Low - High

This mode places a High-Pass filter on the source Deck and a Low-Pass Filter on the second Deck. Both filters are set at the same Cutoff Frequency in order to cover the all of the available frequency range. However, the Cutoff Frequency is changed according to the position of the Crossfader.
Mid

The Mid setting places a Mid-Pass filter on the source Deck and a Mid-Cut filter on the second Deck. This defines a Mid-Band characteristic with a center frequency of 1 kHZ that is cut from the source Deck and passed to the second Deck. The width of the Mid-Band is controlled by the Crossfader.

Traq Morph Cut Style


1/8 - 1/8 (Default)

This cuts between songs in an 1/8 note rhythm where the source Deck is heard on the first 1/8 note while the other Deck plays is heard the second 1/8 note, otherwise known as the off-beat.
1/16 - 3/16

This setting cuts between songs in a 1/16 note rhythm where the source Deck is heard on the first 1/16 note of each beat while the other Deck plays is heard the on the following three 1/16 notes.
1/6 - 16

This setting cuts also between songs in a 1/16 note rhythm. The difference here is that Torq alternates between the signals source Deck is heard on the first 1/16 note and third 1/16 note of each beat while the other Deck plays is heard the on second and fourth 1/16 notes of each beat. Cutting in this manner is best for mixing songs with a strong 1/16 note feel, such as Trance or Drum n Bass.
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The Traq Morph Cut algorithm and Triplet Mode

Triplet Mode Button

Clicking the Triplet mode button in the Torq Toolbar activates Triplet mode, which adds a triplet or shuffle feel to all time based or rhythmic functions. Triplet mode is very useful for adding a higher degree of syncopation to your mixes. When using the Traq Morph Cut algorithm clicking Triplet Mode button in the Torq Toolbar changes the rhythmic timing of the 1/8 - 1/8, and 1/16 - 3/16, 1/16 - 1/16 settings to 1/8T - 1/8T, 1/16T - 3/16T, and 1/16T - 1/16T, even though the new setting do not appear in the list of available choices under the Traq Morph Cut Style preferences.

Traq Morph Duck Style


Band - Duck (Default)

As the Crossfader is moved from one deck to another Torq locates the loudest frequency of the second song and gradually attenuates, or lowers the same frequency in the first song. For example, lets say you have songs on Decks B and C with the Crossfader set to Deck B, and the loudest frequency in the signal from Deck C is 240 Hz. In this instance, the volume of the song on Deck B will gradually decrease at 240 HZ, as the Crossfader is moved towards Deck C.
Standard

This setting lowers the volume of the first Deck across the whole frequency range as the Crossfader moves towards the second Deck.

Traq Morph Style


Strong (Default)

The Strong setting places a 24db filter on a deck which makes the audio signal sound louder and enhances the modulation of the morphing.
Gentle

This setting is more subtle, as it does not increase the volume or exaggerate the modulation the morphing.

Synq Reference
This option determines the forcefulness or resolution of the synchronization used in Torq based on the options listed below.
Bar (Default)

With this option selected, Torq will align a synced Deck to the tempo and downbeat of the other Deck or Master Tempo. Any attempts to adjust the alignment of the track will result in Torq forcing the tracks back into synchronization with their downbeats aligned (the thick lines of the Phase Grids will be aligned with each other at all times).

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Beat

Torq will match a synced Deck to the tempo and beat of the other Deck or Master Tempo with no regard to the downbeats in the Phase Grids. Any attempts to realign the synced Deck will result in Torq forcing the track back into alignment with the nearest beat (the thick lines of the Phase Grids may be out of alignment with each other).
Tempo

Torq will only match the tempo of a synced Deck to the other Deck or Master Tempo. When you press Play on a Deck, Torq will not force the song into alignment. It will be up to you to start the music at the right moment and keep it in alignment.
Synq Reference Button

Synq Reference Button

The Sync Reference can also be changed by clicking the Synq Reference button on the Torq Toolbar. Each click of this button cycles through Bar, Beat, and Tempo modes.

Reset Speed Slider on Deck Load


These options determine how Torq behaves when a new song is loaded onto a Deck.
Yes

This is the default option which tells Torq to reset the speed of a Deck to 0% (original tempo) every time a new song is loaded.
No

With this option selected, Torq will maintain the position of the Speed Slider when loading a new song. This is the preferred mode when using MIDI to control the Speed Sliders since the position of the on-screen slider will remain synced to the position of the MIDI slider.

Load on Deck While Playing


These options determine what Torq will do if you try to load a song onto a Deck that is already playing.
Ask (Default)

With this option selected, Torq will always ask you confirm that your want to load a song onto a deck that is already playing.
Enable

Choosing this option lets you load a song onto a Deck that is already playing.
Disable

This option prevents you from loading a song onto a Deck that is already playing.

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QuickCues and Looping


The options in this section control the creation and behavior of Quick Cues and Quick Loops.
Refer to QuickCue on page 43, and Loop on page 45, for more information about QuickCues and Loops.

QuickLoop Size
This option affects how the QuickLoop buttons behave.
Bar (Default)

When this option is chosen, your QuickLoops are created in lengths of one, two, four, or eight bars.
Beat

When this option is chosen, your QuickLoops are created in lengths of one, two, four, or eight beats.

QuickLoop Behavior
This preference determines the behavior of the QuickLoop buttons after a QuickLoop has been created and activated.
Cut And Grow (Default)

With this option selected, each click of a QuickCue button cuts the current loop length in half. Therefore, if you press the 2 button to create a 2-bar loop, pressing 2 again will reduce the loop to 1 bar in length. Pressing 2 again will cut the loop to half a bar (2 beats). You can continue pressing 2 again and again and the loop will get smaller and smaller to the point where only a high-pitched sound is heard. If you hold the SHIFT key while pressing the QuickLoop button, the loop will grow in lengthdoubling its previous length. There is no limit to how long the loop can be, other than the length of the song. This functionality can also be utilized with the QuickLoop Size preference set to Beat.
Direct

This mode is closer to the loop functions on some DJ CD players. After youve created your loop by pressing one of the QuickLoop buttons, you can use the QuickLoop buttons to divide the loop length by their value. For example, pressing the 1 button will create a 1-bar loop. If you then press 2, you will end up with a half-bar (2 beat) loop since 1 divided by 2 is 1/2. If you press the 4 button, the loop will become 1 beat long (1 bar divided by 4 equals 1/4-bar [1 beat]). If you then press 1 again, the loop will return to its original length (1 divided by 1 is 1). Another example: Press 2 to capture a 2 beat loop. Press 8 to reduce that loop to a 16th-note in length (2 beats divided by 8 equals 1/4 a of beat or one 16th-note).

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Loop Out Behavior


This preference controls the accuracy of Loop Out Markers in relation to the position of the beginning of loop.
16th (Default)

With this option selected, Torq will make sure that a Loop Out marker is set at a position that is quantized to the 16th-note relative to the position of the Loop In marker. In this mode, you can create loops that are any number of 16th-notes long. For example, you can create a loop that is 16 16th-notes long (1 bar). You could make a loop that is 2 bars, 1.5 bars, 0.5 bars (2 beats), etc. You can also make loops of odd lengths such as 15 16th-notes long. Loops like that will appear to fall out of sync because they dont have even loop lengths.
Smart

This option prevents you from accidentally creating odd loop lengths that can be generated when using the 16th setting. In this mode, Torq will force every loop to a length that will always loop in time with the music. Smart Mode also lets you create a loops as small as a 16th-note and grows in powers of two from there. Therefore, you can achieve the following loop lengths: 1/16-bar, 1/8-bar, 1/4-bar (1 beat), 1/2-bar (2 Beats), 1 bar, 2 bars, 4 bars, 8 bars, 16 bars, etc.

Quantize Cue and Loop Points


The following options determine whether or not the placements on Loops and QuickCues will be quantized to the nearest 16th note.
Enabling Quantize does not change the positions of QuickCues or Loop points that are already set in a song. It only controls the creation of new QuickCues and Loops. No (Default)

With this option selected, Torq will not quantize the placement of loops or QuickCues when they are created. This gives you the freedom to set these points wherever you wish.
Yes

This option forces each new Loop or QuickCue to the nearest 16th-note. This ensures that your QuickCues and Loops occur right on beat when creating them on-the-fly.
Quantize Loop and QuickCue Points Button

Quantize Loop and QuickCue Points Button

You can also switch this feature on and off by clicking the Quantize Loop and QuickCue Points in the Torq Toolbar.

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Database
The following preferences determine how the Torq Database will handle your audio files.

Search iTunes with Database


If iTunes is installed on your computer, selecting Yes for this option will integrate your iTunes Library into the Torq Database. Any songs within the Library will be instantly accessible in Torq, along with all other folders assigned to the Database. If this option is set to No, youll have to manually select the iTunes Library in the Browser window to view its contents.

Search iPod with Database


When this preference is set to Yes, any connected iPods (except the iPod Shuffle, iPod Touch, and iPhone) will have their music libraries incorporated into the Database for instant searching and access. If this option is off, you will have to manually select the iPod Library in the Browser to view its contents.
Torq streams music directly from the iPod. Do not disconnect the iPod until you have finished playing music from it.

Musical Genre (BPM)


Torq attempts to determine the tempo and phase of a song when you load it into a Deck. Coaxing a computer to hear the tempo of a song is partially art and science. This preference is here to assist when the science fails. In the Beat Detection Style menu, you will find a list of musical styles/genres. Choosing one of the styles tells Torq to alter its analysis algorithm for all future file analysis. Choosing a matching style greatly improves the accuracy of Torqs beat detection. For example, if you have House selected in the Preferences and attempt to analyze a group of Drum & Bass tracks, the analysis will return the incorrect tempo (it will be too slow). Set this preference to Drum & Bass then re-analyze the affected files. Those files will now be analyzed with the proper tempo.

Analysis BPM Low and High Limit


You can further fine-tune the beat-detection by setting your own upper and lower limits for the BPM. Once set, Torq ensures that all analyzed BPMs return within the specified tempo range.
Whenever you set your own upper and lower BPM limits, the Beat Detection Style will automatically change to Custom.

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Locations Preferences

Locations Preferences

This page lists the locations of the various system and application folders used by Torq. If these locations are incorrect or if you have moved any of the folder, Torq lets you reset the file path by clicking the appropriate Browse button and navigating to the proper location.

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GUI Preferences
The options on this page affect the visual appearance of Torq.

GUI Preferences

Highlight Assigned Decks


With this option is set to Yes (default) the edge of currently targeted decks will be highlighted with a colored rectangle. Torq Decks assigned to the left side of qualified hardware controller are highlighted in green, while Decks assigned to the right side are highlighted in purple. If a deck is highlighted in red, it will be controlled by both sides of your hardware.
Refer to Deck Switch on page 36, for more information.

Skin
These option allows you to select a different Skin or appearance for Torq.

Visual Scheme
These options let you choose different color schemes for the Torq interface.

Language
These options let you choose which language will be used in all areas of Torq. Once you have chosen a language setting, Torq will need to be restarted before the changes take effect.

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Tooltips
If you hover your mouse over a control in Torq, often a small Tooltip will appear along the lower edge of the GUI, describing the function of the control. Additionally, when you move a knob or slider with the mouse, a Tooltip will be displayed showing the new setting of the knob or slider next to it. This preference chooses the level of detail in the Tooltips.

Full (Default)
When selected, all Tooltips will be displayed, both when you hover your mouse and when you operate a control.

Adjust
When selected, the only Tooltips that will appear are those showing the adjustment applied to a knob or slider. The normal Tooltips seen when hovering the mouse over a control will be hidden.

None
This setting disables all Tooltips.

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Chapter 13: Rewire

Torq is unique in that it can operate as a ReWire slave. ReWire is a special technology created by Propellerhead that allows two or more different audio applications to share audio and MIDI data. The system is composed of a single ReWire host, such as Pro Tools or Ableton Live, and multiple ReWire slaves. The slaves will all send their audio outputs to the host, allowing you to mix, EQ, and refine the audio using the tools within the host application. Furthermore, the host and slaves will all share transport and timing information, allowing the multiple software applications to act as a single unit.
To launch a Torq ReWire session:
1

Launch your ReWire Host application. This could be Ableton Live, Pro Tools M-Powered, or any other application that will host a ReWire session. Launch Torq. Since Torq is launched second, it will automatically launch as the ReWire Slave.

2 3

In order to hear Torq, youll need to select the program as the source for audio channels in the host application. In Live, this is done by selecting Torq in the top box of the Channel I/O strip. Youll also need to turn the Monitoring to In to allow the audio from Torq to pass through Live. In Pro Tools, choose or create a new Aux track and select the stereo ReWire Instrument plug-in (Torq) in the top effect slot.

Master Tempo
Because Torq is the Rewire Slave the Master Tempo is determined by the tempo and timeline of the Rewire Host. This lets you synchronize any or all of the decks to the host by clicking their corresponding Sync button. Now, any song you play on a synced deck in Torq is locked to whatever youre currently doing in the Host program even if you change the host tempo while the music is playing.

Audio Routing
When using two programs together via ReWire, the audio generated by Torq will be fed to audio channels in the Rewire Host. This lets you further process the outputs of Torq using the Host applications effects. You can record the output of Torq into the application to add to your productions. You can also create your own drum parts, basslines, and loops, and also play virtual instruments in real-time within the Host, which can be layered on top of the music youre playing in Torq. When Torq is used with a regular audio interface, you have the option of assigning various Torq output channels to outputs on the audio interface (see Audio Preferences on page 111 in the Torq Preferences chapter). When using ReWire, those same audio outputs are available within the Host application.

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Internal Mixer Mode


If you switch Torq into External Mixer mode, youll find that ReWire channels 1 and 2 carry the signal from Deck A, channels 3 and 4 carry the signal from Deck B, channels 5 and 6 will carry the signal from Deck C, channels 7 and 8 will carry the signal from Deck C. The audio signal from the Torq Sampler is sent over channels 9 and 10.

External Mixer Mode


When using Internal Mixer mode, channels 1 and 2 will carry the Master Output (from the Mixer) while channels 3 and 4 carry the PFL/Headphone signal. This allows you to create your own monitoring path or mixing path in the Host application to suit your needs.

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Chapter 14: External and MIDI Control

One of Torqs greatest features is the ability to use external sources to control the playback of your song files. This lets you use the Torq Control Vinyl or Torq Control CD's, as well as other qualified hardware to provide the same method of DJing as traditional turntables and/or CD decks. Torq also allows you to use external MIDI hardware to control nearly any feature within the application. The Control Vinyl and Control CD system works by using vinyl records and compact discs imprinted with special control signals. Youll play these control signals on your turntables and/or CD players and feed that signal into any professional audio interface that has four inputs (with phono preamplifiers on each input if you are using turntables) such as the M-Audio Conectiv. Torq will listen to those audio signals and will use the encoded information to control the playback of the Decks.
Refer to Appendix B, Torq Vinyl Control System for more information about using Control Vinyl with Torq.

External Control
This section Explains how to configure qualified external hardware such as a turntable or CD player to control Torq using supported control vinyl or control CDs.
Refer to www.avid.com/torqFAQ for a current list of qualified hardware, control vinyl and control CDs.

Enabling Vinyl/CD Control


Before you can control Torq with your external hardware, you will need to connect your hardware and enable vinyl and CD control as described below.
To enable Vinyl or CD control:
1

Connect the outputs of your first turntable or CD player to inputs 1/2 of your audio interface. If the interface has a Line/Phono input selector switch, be sure to set it to Phono if using turntables, or Line if using CD players (or turntables with built-in preamps).

OUTPUT B OUTPUT A

GROUND

INPUT B

INPUT A

Line Line Phono

Phono

Turntable or CD Player
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Connect the outputs of your second turntable or CD player to inputs 3/4 of your audio interface. Again, youll need to set its input selector switch as described above.
2 3

Open Torqs Preferences and select the Audio tab.

Audio preferences tab


4 5 6 7 8

Make sure your audio interface is selected in the Audio Device drop-down menu. Click the Control Input A drop-down menu and choose input 1 -- input 2. Click the Control Input B drop-down menu and choose input 3 -- input 4. Click the Control Input C drop-down menu and choose input 1 -- input 2. Click the Control Input D drop-down menu and choose input 3 -- input 4.

9 The next step requires that you select the type of control signals youll be using for each Deck. If youre using the Torq Control Vinyl records, select Torq Vinyl for the Control Type. If youll be using the Torq Control CD's, select Torq CD for the Control Type. Since this selection is independent for each Deck, you can use any combination of vinyl and CD control that youd like.

If you want to use the Ms. Pinky Interdimensional Wrecked System vinyl records to control Torq, select either Gen1, Gen2, or Gen3 depending on the generation of records you own.
10 11

Close the Preferences window.

Select the appropriate Control Input for each Deck from its Deck Mode pop-up menu. Control Input 1 for Deck A, Control Input 2 for Deck B, Control Input 3 for Deck C, and Control Input 4 for Deck D.

Enable External Control by clicking the Control button on each Deck. The playback of the Decks will now be controlled by the incoming control signals you have selected.
12

Control button

Refer to Audio Preferences on page 111 for more information about Torq Audio Preferences.

External Control Calibration


While terms such as digital vinyl are sometimes used to describe vinyl control systems such as the one used in Torq, the truth is, the system is still analog. There are digits encoded in the analog domain on the Torq Control Vinyls and CD's, and those digits are transferred to Torq by analog means through the inputs of your audio interface. Because of this, the control system is subject to certain environmental and physical variables that can influence its performance. The system is very robust and compensates for many of these factors, allowing a wide range of variance between equipment to yield identical control response. This means the equipment you already own (turntables, cartridges, styli, CD players, etc.) is probably sufficient for use with Torqs external control system.

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Avid has diligently tested the control system using a wide variety of equipment from different manufacturers, but not every possible combination could be tested. While unlikely, it is possible that there could be problems with components in your DJ setup that might render the control system inoperable. When this happens, the Control Calibration displays on the External Control Preferences tab will be your first place to look in order to diagnose the problem.

Control Type
If the external control system is enabled but doesnt seem to be working, first check the Control Type settings for each Deck. If you have the wrong Control Type selected, Torq will not react in the proper manner to the control signals. Once youve verified the setting here, you can continue diagnosing your problem.

Velocity and Position


When operating properly, the external control system provides three vital pieces of information to Torqs Decks: the direction of the Control Vinyl or Control CD, its rotation speed, and the current position on the record or CD. These values are reflected in the Torq as described below.

Velocity
The Velocity display shows a number that indicates both speed and direction at the same time. When the Velocity is 0, the record or CD is stopped, or the needle is no longer in contact with the vinyl. If the number is 1.0, that means the vinyl record is running forward at normal speed (when using Torq Control Vinyls, this refers to 33 1/3 RPM playback on the turntable). When the number is -1.0, it means the record or CD is running backwards at normal speed (33 1/3 RPM). As you manipulate the record or CD by hand or with their pitch adjusters, the Velocity display immediately changes to reflect the movements.

Position
The Position display shows a number that Torq uses to calculate the playback position for the audio file loaded into the Deck. This number will increase when the record or CD is playing forward, and decrease when playing backwards. The value will also jump whenever you lift the needle off the record and place it in another location (known as a needle drop). This is what allows Torq to play back a song just as if it was pressed right into the Control Vinyl or Control CD.

Absolute Mode
This is the default control style when in Standard mode and is indicated by the ABS icon on what was previously the top half of the Play/ Pause button on the Decks. Absolute mode means that Torq will be following the position of the external control source. This is most apparent when using the Control Vinylyou can lift the needle and place it in different locations on the record and Torqs Decks will follow this position. If you place the needle at the beginning of the record (or rewind the Control CD back to the beginning of a track), the song in the Deck will also jump back to the beginning. This mode is obviously the mode that will recreate the sensation of using CD's and Vinyl with the greatest detail. You will be able to control playback position from your turntables or CD players without having to interact with the Torq interface.

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Relative Mode
Relative mode will ignore the playback position of the Control Vinyl or Control CD. Torq will only monitor the direction and speed of the control source. To enable Relative mode on a Deck, click the Absolute mode button (ABS). The icon will change to REL indicating that Relative mode is now active (click the button again to toggle back to Absolute mode). In Relative mode, placing the needle in different locations on the record will have no effect on the musicplayback will resume from the point it left off as soon as the needle touches the record again. Even though the playback position of the Control Vinyl or Control CD is not affecting the playback position of the song on the Deck, the speed and direction of the control source will still continue to work. You can change the playback speed using the pitch adjusters on your turntables or CD players and the playback speed of the Deck will follow. You can even scratch like normal. The added benefit is that, should the needle skip a groove while youre scratching, you wont lose the sound you were using. You can continue to scratch the same location of the audio file even if the needle keeps skipping. While there will be no audible change in music playback when switching a Deck from Absolute mode to Relative mode, there is a chance that the playback position could jump to an unanticipated position when switching from Relative mode back into Absolute mode. This is due to the fact that, while using the features of Relative mode, the playback position of the Deck and the actual location of the control source could fall out of sync (for example, if you loop the song on the Deck, the song will no longer proceed forward but the location of the control source will continue to play forward). When you switch back to Absolute mode, Torq will immediately jump to the position indicated by the control source, even if its a position after the song has ended. Therefore, be extremely careful when toggling back to Absolute mode. Only do so if (1) you know the location of the song and control source are still in sync or (2) if youve muted the Deck before switching over, to prevent any jumps from being heard by your audience.

Absolute Rotation Angle (ARA)

ARA Button

When scratching with a traditional record where the music resides on the vinyl itself, you can be certain that a sound you want to scratch will always be in the same place. In other words, the location of the sound or hit point is absolute. So long as the needle never skips to a position before or after the location, or to a different physical groove, the hit will always play whenever the rotation of the record causes the needle to cross that spot. On the other hand, when using DJ software the location of the hit point can change for various reasons, which can make it challenging to pinpoint the location of the sound, relative to the position of the vinyl. For example, in relative mode picking up the needle will stop playback and the song position while the vinyl continues turning. When the needle is placed back on the vinyl, the song continues playing from the previous location, even though the vinyl has turned some number of degrees.

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Setting the Relative Mode preference to Absolute Rotation Angle (see Skip Protection Button on page 122), or clicking the Absolute Rotation Angle (ARA) button locks the hit point to the position of the needle within a single rotation of the turntable. This means that correct sound will play every time the hit point passes under the needle.
Try out Absolute Rotation Angle Mode
1 2

Click the Enable ARA button in the Torq Toolbar to activate Absolute Rotation Angle mode.

Find a suitable sound or hit point in a song, and make a visual note of how it falls exactly on the orange Now Line in the Waveform Display. Set a Quick Cue at this location.

4 Place a small piece of tape (a sticker) on the label of the record so that it is level with the needle. At this point when the sticker is level with the needle, the Quick Cue should also line up with the Now Line. 5

Start playback, and scratch the track at the hit point multiple times.

6 Stop scratching and check the alignment of the Quick Cue and the Now Line, as well as the sticker and the needle. They should all be in line with each other. 7 8 9

Lift the needle from the record. Turn the record forward 90 or 180 degrees. Place the needle back on the record and turn the record back to where it is level with the tape.

The Hit point and the needle are back in alignment, allowing you to keep your marks and your sounds tied together

Relative Speed Mode


Relative Speed mode is activated by setting the Relative Speed Mode preference to Automatic (see Relative Speed Mode on page 123). When controlling multiple decks with one turntable or CD player, Relative Speed Mode lets you use the speed slider on your hardware to adjust the speed of one song, and then switch to controlling another deck without causing the tempo on the second song to jump to match the position of the sliders position or adjusted tempo. Instead, the tempo of the song remains constant, yet the Deck`s tempo slider will still respond to movement of the external hardware tempo slider. In effect, this ties the current position of the internal speed slider in Torq to the current position of the external speed (or pitch adjust) slider on your hardware, even if they don`t match.

Expanding the Range of a Hardware Speed Slider


Another advantage of Relative Speed mode is that it can be used to expand the available range of your hardware speed slider beyond the values of +8% and -8%. For example, if you are playing a song that was recorded at 100 BPM, the maximum adjustment you could ordinarily with a traditional turntable is 8% in either direction. In this instance, 108 BPM (+8%), or 92 BPM (-8%); However, in Relative Speed mode, you can continue adjusting the tempo in increments of up to +/- 8% at a time as described below.

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To extend the range of a hardware Speed Slider:


1 2 3

Set your hardware Speed Slider set to 0%. Load a song onto a Deck, switch it to External Control and start playing the song.

Raise the or lower tempo by 8%, and then click the External Control button on the Deck. This releases the Deck from External Control. Reset the Speed Slider on your hardware to 0%, and Click the External Control button on the Deck. The Deck is now under External Control. Repeat steps 3 and 4 as needed, using whatever values you want.

As you can see, the effective range of the hardware speed slider has been expanded beyond the usual +/- 8% range.

BPM Matching
So how does one go about doing a DJ set with only one turntable? It is a little different than doing it in Standard mode, primarily due to the fact that you must use Torqs on-screen Speed sliders to match tempos as opposed to using the pitch sliders on your turntable or CD player.
Try it out:
1 2

Click Vinyl on a Deck and start the external control source. While the song is playing, move the Decks on-screen Speed slider.

3 Sure enoughthe playback speed of the song changes, just as if youd moved the pitch slider on the actual turntable or CD player.

The reason for requiring the use of the on-screen controls lies in the fact that external control can be toggled back and forth between the Decks at will. Any time you do this, youll want the Decks to keep their previous tempos. If the tempo of a Deck changed when swapping external control, the mix would suddenly fall wildly out of sync. Therefore, the speed of the Control Vinyl or Control CD must remain constantTorq will scale the playback rate as appropriate based on the setting of the Decks Speed sliders. If you change the speed of the control source, youll find that the Decks suddenly change speed any time you toggle external control. There is, however, one unique advantage to this setup: you can make use of Torqs automatic beat-matching! Instead of manually moving the on-screen Speed slider with the mouse or MIDI Control, you can simply click the Decks Sync button and its Speed slider will be moved to match the tempo of the other Deck. Click the Sync button again to turn it off, and the Deck will remain at the proper speed waiting for the external control signal to begin. All you have to do then is start the music at the right time and keep it in alignment during the mix via external control. This makes the process of preparing the next track much faster.

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Runout Protection
Since there is only about 12 minutes of usable control signal on each side of the Control Vinyls or on each track of the CD, it is possible that the song you are controlling could exceed the length of control signal available on the record or CD. This is extremely common when using Relative mode since the needle or CD position could be halfway through when you start the next track. In order to prevent the music from stopping abruptly if the control signal runs out on the record or CD, Torq features Runout Protection which essentially disables External Control when the record or CD reaches the last 30 seconds of its signal. When this happens, the songs waveform will start to flash yellow and the song on the Deck continue to play. You will now be able to take the needle off the record and place it back at the beginning without Torq stopping the music (the same is true for the CDyou can jump back to the beginning of the track without stopping the music). Once Torq reads a few seconds of signal from the new location, the flashing will stop and Torq will re-engage External Control allowing you to scratch and manipulate like normal.
If you are currently in Absolute mode when the last 30 seconds of control signal are reached, Torq will automatically switch the Deck into Relative mode when it engages the Runout Protection. The Deck will remain in Relative mode after you reset the record or CD, thus preventing the music from jumping to an unexpected location when external control is enabled again.

Resolving Playback Issues


Using a Deck in External Control Mode while using the internal soundcard on a laptop, causes Torq to use the sound picked up by the internal microphone as the control source. This causes the BPM value and Speed Adjust randomly change, leading to errors.

Reversed Playback Direction


If you find that Torq seems to be responding backwards to the Control Vinyls or CD's, take a look at the Velocity display. If the number shown is negative while the control source is playing forward, it could mean the audio cables connecting the turntable or CD player to your interface are backwards. Swap the left and right plugs on the back of your audio interface and the problem should be resolved.

Erratic Playback Position


If Torq seems to jump to random locations in a song during playback, take a look at the Position display. This number should rapidly increase as the control source plays. If this value looks like its changing erratically, it is most likely due to damaged control records (which is normal after extended use). Another cause could be poor stereo separation in the turntables needle or preamp, which is especially common with very old needles. To fix this, purchase a replacement vinyl record, replace your stylus, or purchase one of the recommended styli/cartridges listed at the end of this manual.

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Power Threshold (Controlling Erratic Velocity Values)


A turntable is a very sensitive piece of equipment. It can take the smallest vibrations and amplify them into audible sound. Thats whats happening when you play a recordthe grooves in the record vibrate the stylus as they play and those vibrations are translated to audio. The problem with turntables, though, is that they cannot distinguish between what is an intentional vibration caused by the moving grooves in the record and an unintentional vibration picked up through the body of the turntable. For example, if you kick the table the turntable is on, that thump will be transferred through the turntable up through the needle and translated into sound. What this means, in terms of the External Control system, is that vibrations and other unintentional noise can contaminate the control signals being read from the vinyl. When this happens, the noise can temporarily throw off the ability of Torq to track the records. In order to help minimize this problem, Torq has a setting called Power Threshold with various level settings. The idea is to set this value above any of the extraneous noise such that Torq will only focus on the louder control signals from the records.
To set the Power Threshold:
1 2 3 4

Open the External Control Preferences and enable External Control. Place the needle of your turntable on the Control Vinyl, but leave the turntable stopped. Lower the Power Threshold to -40 and look at the Velocity value for the deck.

If the Velocity is showing random values even though the turntable is stopped, that means the Power Threshold is too lowTorq is picking up noise and interpreting it as a control signal.

Increase the Power Threshold by 5dB and look at the Velocity value again. If you still see random Velocity values, raise the Power Threshold another 5dB.

Eventually, youll reach a point where the Velocity stays at 0.00. This is the optimal setting for the Power Threshold.
6

If youre in a noisy environment that does not have proper turntable isolation (to prevent external vibrations from being picked up by the stylus), you may need to raise the Power Threshold setting a little higher to filter out the additional noise in the room.

Error Index
If youve checked your audio cable connections and have also replaced your turntables needles yet still experience problems, go to the External page of the Torq Preferences (see External Preferences on page 122), and look at the Error Index displays. These boxes typically display a number between 0.15 and 1.50, which is perfectly normal. If the number is above 2.0, it will turn red, indicating that there is too much noise in the audio signal for Torq to properly track position and velocity. Try cleaning the record using a high quality vinyl cleaning system. Too much dirt on the record can cause errors in the tracking process. A high Error Index can also be caused by wear and tear on the Control Vinyl. Each time a record is played, it is slightly damaged, especially if the tracking weight of the needle is very heavy. After repeated use, the control signal may become distorted and unreadable. Simply flip over the Control Vinyl to the second side or purchase a replacement record from the M-Audio Webstore (www.m-audio.com).

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If the output level of your stylus/cartridge is too low, this can also result in high Error Index readings. Try replacing your stylus/cartridge with one of the recommended models listed on our website at www.avid.com/torqFAQ.
Refer to Wreckin' the Records on page 161 for more information about resolving playback issues.

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MIDI Control
Torq provides the option of MIDI control for nearly every button, knob, and slider on the interface. Since MIDI is a common protocol shared between all types of music equipment, you can use almost anything capable of generating MIDI note or CC messages to control Torqthey do not need to be specialized DJ controllers. This will offer you a way to experiment with different control methods when DJing, such as using an M-Audio Trigger Finger to control samples or an M-Audio Axiom 25 keyboard to control effects and pitches.
Please go to the M-Audio Support site at http://www.m-audio.com/index.php?do=support&tab=manuals for the Controller Assignments Appendix Document.

MIDI Learn
Every musician approaches their craft from a slightly different direction. DJing is no different. That is why Torq is basically a blank slate when run for the first timethere are no pre-set control assignments for any of the buttons, knobs, or sliders seen on screen for you to memorize. Instead, you get to assign the most important controls for you to whatever MIDI controls make the most sense to you.

Creating a MIDI Assignment


Torq uses a simple MIDI Learn scheme to make assigning controls on your MIDI controllers a breeze:
1

Right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the button, knob, or slider you wish to control via MIDI. The control will be highlighted in red indicating that Torq is standing by.

2 Move the desired control on your MIDI controller. That is, move the knob or slider you want to use or press the button/key you wish to use. 3

Torq will intercept the incoming MIDI message and will instantly assign it to the control. The red highlight will disappear and the MIDI control will be active.

Keyboard Learn
You can also use your computers keyboard to control elements of the Torq interface using the same method as MIDI Learn above. Simply right-click (CTRL-click for Mac) on a control on screen, then press a key on your keyboard. That key will then be assigned to the selected control. The same method for changing and clearing MIDI assignments described below also works for keyboard assignments.

Assigning Buttons to Knobs or Sliders


You can assign a MIDI button/key or a key on your computer keyboard to a knob or slider in Torqs interface. When doing this, pressing the MIDI button or key will cause the knob or sliders value to toggle between an assignable minimum and maximum value. For example, assign the X key on your computer keyboard to the Low EQ knob. Turn up the EQ to +6 using the mouse, then press the X key on your keyboard. The EQ will jump to 0. Press X again, and the EQ will jump back up to +6.

Assigning Knobs or Sliders to Buttons


You can also assign a MIDI knob or slider to one of Torqs buttons. When doing this, the button will turn on anytime the knob or slider is turned past its halfway point (outputting a MIDI value greater than 64). The button will turn back off when the knob or slider is moved lower than its halfway point.
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Quitting MIDI Learn


If you change your mind about assigning a control or key to a function you can back out of MIDI Learn mode by pressing the Escape key (Esc) on your keyboard before making the assignment change.

Clearing a MIDI Assignment


If youve assigned a MIDI control or key using MIDI Learn and you wish to clear the assignment, simply right-click (CTRL-click on Mac) the desired control in Torq, then press the Backspace key (Delete key on Mac) on your computer keyboard.

Changing MIDI Assignment


If you assign a MIDI knob, for example, to the Low EQ in the Mixer, you can assign it to the Mid EQ by simply right-clicking (CTRL-click on Mac) the Mid EQ knob and moving the MIDI Knob. Doing so will clear the assignment to the Low EQ knob and the MIDI control will now be mapped to the Mid EQ knob. This allows you to use a small controller for Torq since you can continually reassign its controls without worrying about what the previous assignments were.

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Chapter 15: MIDI Platter Control

MIDI Platter Control Mode


Torq now features a new per-deck function called MIDI Platter Control mode. Unlike External Control (see External Control on page 139), the MIDI Platter Control parameter does not appear in the Torq interface. However, it is accessed using the Motor Off button on your hardware.
MIDI Platter Control mode is only available in Vinyl mode. Switching to MIDI Platter Control mode automatically selects Vinyl Mode. Selecting Hybrid or CDJ de-activates MIDI Platter Control Mode.

While Torq is in MIDI Platter Control mode, pressing the Play button on your hardware will resume the playback of a paused track, and the speed of the hardware platter is determined by the position and range of the Speed Slider. In this instance Torq reads the turning speed of the hardware control platter and uses this information to adjust the tempo of the audio you hear. The very first time MIDI Platter Control mode is activated Torq prevents unwanted and jarring speed changes by waiting before it plays the song at the new tempo. However, this monetary wait does not occur when MIDI Platter Control mode is already active. For example, youre playing a song with MIDI Platter Control mode switched off. The you activate MIDI Platter Control and mix in a second track. At this point the playback of the second song will be subjected to the waiting before it is heard. However, playback of the next track will not go through the waiting process as long as MIDI Platter Control has not been switched off.

Playback Methods
Based on the platter speed (in RPMs) set by the Speed Slider and the resulting playback tempo, MIDI Platter Control will work in one of the three playback methods (Playback modes) listed below:

Untouched
If the difference between the original song tempo and the new tempo set by the Speed Slider is very slight, Torq assumes the platter is not being touched and leaves the playback untouched. This prevents rapid pitch changes or pitch-fluttering in the audio.

Nudge Mode
When Key Tempo Lock is switched off and the Speed Slider is set to increase the playback tempo by 20% or more, Torq will perform a beat alignment process using a nudged time stretch.

Scratch
If the platter speed is increased or decreased by more than 20%, Torq assumes that you are using the platter for scratching and this is what will be heard. Releasing the platter for a moment will revert to one of the previous playback methods.
If MIDI Platter Control mode is switched off Torq will only perform nudges whenever the platter is turned.

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MIDI Platter Control Mode and Auto Sync


Whenever synced deck is in MIDI Platter Control mode it can be used for scratching, but the Auto Sync feature overrides nudge mode in order to keep the decks synchronized. This synchronization is temporarily disabled whenever you use the platter for scratching.

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Appendix A: Key Commands

The following tables list Mac and Windows key commands for various Torq 2.0 functions as listed below:

Browser Commands
The Up, Down, Left, and Right Arrow Keys are listed as Up, Down, Left or Right.

Function Move up or down through the Index or File List Move between the Index and the File List Hide or reveal subfolders of a selected Index item Enable or disable Track Preview for a selected song in the File List Rewind or forward through a song in Track Preview Load selected song to Deck A Load selected song to Deck B Load selected song to Deck C Load selected song to Deck D Jump to text Search Field (Enter jumps back to Index/File List) Jump to Filter Text Field (Enter jumps back to Index/File List) Jump to Crates Jump to Playlist Jump to Database Add song to selected Playlist Add song to selected Crate Deletes items from Crate/Playlist/Database Create new Playlist Create new Crate or Sub-Crate Rename selected Index item (Crate, Playlist, etc.) Select all files in File List Force analyze a song without loading to a deck Torq 2.0 User Guide 152

Mac Key Up or Down Left or Right Enter Shift + Enter Shift + Left or Right F1 or Cmd + Left F2 or Cmd + Right F3 or Cmd + Up F4 or Cmd + Down Ctrl + F Ctrl + Shift + F Shift + C Shift + P Shift + D Cmd + P Cmd + C Delete Alt + P Alt + C Ctrl + R Ctrl + A Shift + A

Windows Key Up or Down Left or Right Enter Shift + Enter Shift + Left or Right F1 or Ctrl + Left F2 or Ctrl + Right F3 or Ctrl + Up F4 or Ctrl + Down Ctrl + F Ctrl + Shift + F Shift + C Shift + P Shift + D Ctrl + P Ctrl + P Delete Alt + P Alt + C Ctrl + R Ctrl + A Shift + A Appendix A: Key Commands

Function Toggle keyboard control from Browser Mode to Performance Mode Toggle Browser and Snapshot view Refresh Browser window Maximize Browser view

Mac Key Ctrl + Enter Tab Shift + F5 Shift + F6

Windows Key Ctrl + Enter Tab

Shift + F6

Deck Commands
Deck Selection
The the table below lists key commands for assigning the Decks to either side of an M-Audio Xponent DJ Control surface. However it is also important to remember that commands also bring the decks into focus when using your mouse and keyboard to control Torq. If you are using qualified third-party hardware, refer to the its documentation.
Mac users should go into the Keyboard Preferences in Mac OS X, and change the following options before using Torq key commands: On the Keyboard page, Enable Use all F1, F2, etc. keys as standard function keys. On the Keyboard Shortcuts page under Dashboard & Dock, disable Dashboard (F12). Then disable Expos under Expos & Spaces.

Deck Assignment/Selection Left Xponent side controls Deck A Left Xponent side controls Deck B Left Xponent side controls Deck C Left Xponent side controls Deck D Right Xponent side controls Deck A Right Xponent side controls Deck B Right Xponent side controls Deck C Right Xponent side controls Deck D

Mac Key F5 F6 F7 F8 F9 F10 F11 F12

Windows Key F5 F6 F7 F8 F9 F10 F11 F12

The corresponding Function keys listed above for selecting Decks B and C are the same in both Four Deck and Two Deck modes.

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Deck Functions
The following table list key commands for various deck related functions.
All function keys in parentheses are the Deck assignment key commands listed in the found in the previous section. In the context of this section the parentheses mean that you should momentarily press or tap them instead of holding them down, and then follow up with the rest of the key stroke as usual. For example, (F5)+Shift+1 means you should tap the F5 to bring Deck A into focus on the left side of your hardware, then hold down Shift and press number 1 key above the letters on your keyboard.

Deck A
The Up, Down, Left, and Right Arrow Keys are listed as Up, Down, Left or Right.

Function Load selected song to Deck A Unload Track on Deck A Set QuickCue 1 on Deck A

Mac Key F1 or Cmd + Left Shift + A (F5)+Shift+1 or (F9)+Shift+6 (F5)+Shift+2 or (F9)+Shift+7 (F5)+Shift+3 or (F9)+Shift+8 (F5)+Shift+4 or (F9)+Shift+9 (F5)+Shift+5 or (F9)+Shift+0 (F5)+1 or (F9)+6 (F5)+2 or (F9)+7 (F5)+3 or (F9)+8 (F5)+4 or (F9)+9 (F5)+5 or (F9)+0

Windows Key F1 or Ctrl + Left Shift + A (F5)+Shift+1 or (F9)+Shift+6 (F5)+Shift+2 or (F9)+Shift+7 (F5)+Shift+3 or (F9)+Shift+8 (F5)+Shift+4 or (F9)+Shift+9 (F5)+Shift+5 or (F9)+Shift+0 (F5)+1 or (F9)+6 (F5)+2 or (F9)+7 (F5)+3 or (F9)+8 (F5)+4 or (F9)+9 (F5)+5 or (F9)+0

Set QuickCue 2 on Deck A

Set QuickCue 3 on Deck A

Set QuickCue 4 on Deck A

Set QuickCue 5 on Deck A

Select QuickCue 1 on Deck A Select QuickCue 2 on Deck A Select QuickCue 3 on Deck A Select QuickCue 4 on Deck A Select QuickCue 5 on Deck A

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Deck B
The Up, Down, Left, and Right Arrow Keys are listed as Up, Down, Left or Right.

Function Load selected song to Deck B Unload Track on Deck B Set QuickCue 1 on Deck B

Mac Key F2 or Cmd + Right Shift + F2 (F6)+Shift+1 or (F10)+Shift+6 (F6)+Shift+2 or (F10)+Shift+7 (F6)+Shift+3 or (F10)+Shift+8 (F6)+Shift+4 or (F10)+Shift+9 (F6)+Shift+5 or (F10)+Shift+0 (F6)+1 or (F10)+6 (F6)+2 or (F10)+7 (F6)+3 or (F10)+8 (F6)+4 or (F10)+9 (F6)+5 or (F10)+0

Windows Key F2 or Ctrl + Right Shift + F2 (F6)+Shift+1 or (F10)+Shift+6 (F6)+Shift+2 or (F10)+Shift+7 (F6)+Shift+3 or (F10)+Shift+8 (F6)+Shift+4 or (F10)+Shift+9 (F6)+Shift+5 or (F10)+Shift+0 (F6)+1 or (F10)+6 (F6)+2 or (F10)+7 (F6)+3 or (F10)+8 (F6)+4 or (F10)+9 (F6)+5 or (F10)+0

Set QuickCue 2 on Deck B

Set QuickCue 3 on Deck B

Set QuickCue 4 on Deck B

Set QuickCue 5 on Deck B

Select QuickCue 1 on Deck B Select QuickCue 2 on Deck B Select QuickCue 3 on Deck B Select QuickCue 4 on Deck B Select QuickCue 5 on Deck B

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Deck C
The Up, Down, Left, and Right Arrow Keys are listed as Up, Down, Left or Right.

Function Load selected song to Deck C Unload Track on Deck C Set QuickCue 1 on Deck C

Mac Key F3 or Cmd + Up Shift + F3 (F7)+Shift+1 or (F11)+Shift+6 (F7)+Shift+2 or (F11)+Shift+7 (F7)+Shift+3 or (F11)+Shift+8 (F7)+Shift+4 or (F11)+Shift+9 (F7)+Shift+5 or (F11)+Shift+0 (F7)+1 or (F11)+6 (F7)+2 or (F11)+7 (F7)+3 or (F11)+8 (F7)+4 or (F11)+9 (F7)+5 or (F11)+0

Windows Key F3 or Ctrl + Up Shift + F3 (F7)+Shift+1 or (F11)+Shift+6 (F7)+Shift+2 or (F11)+Shift+7 (F7)+Shift+3 or (F11)+Shift+8 (F7)+Shift+4 or (F11)+Shift+9 (F7)+Shift+5 or (F11)+Shift+0 (F7)+1 or (F11)+6 (F7)+2 or (F11)+7 (F7)+3 or (F11)+8 (F7)+4 or (F11)+9 (F7)+5 or (F11)+0

Set QuickCue 2 on Deck C

Set QuickCue 3 on Deck C

Set QuickCue 4 on Deck C

Set QuickCue 5 on Deck C

Select QuickCue 1 on Deck C Select QuickCue 2 on Deck C Select QuickCue 3 on Deck C Select QuickCue 4 on Deck C Select QuickCue 5 on Deck C

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Deck D
The Up, Down, Left, and Right Arrow Keys are listed as Up, Down, Left or Right.

Function Load selected song to Deck D Unload Track on Deck D Set QuickCue 1 on Deck D

Mac Key F4 or Cmd + Down Shift + F4 (F8)+Shift+1 or (F12)+Shift+6 (F8)+Shift+2 or (F12)+Shift+7 (F8)+Shift+3 or (F12)+Shift+8 (F8)+Shift+4 or (F12)+Shift+9 (F8)+Shift+5 or (F12)+Shift+0 (F8)+1 or (F12)+6 (F8)+2 or (F12)+7 (F8)+3 or (F12)+8 (F8)+4 or (F12)+9 (F8)+5 or (F12)+0

Windows Key F4 or Ctrl + Down Shift + F4 (F8)+Shift+1 or (F12)+Shift+6 (F8)+Shift+2 or (F12)+Shift+7 (F8)+Shift+3 or (F12)+Shift+8 (F8)+Shift+4 or (F12)+Shift+9 (F8)+Shift+5 or (F12)+Shift+0 (F8)+1 or (F12)+6 (F8)+2 or (F12)+7 (F8)+3 or (F12)+8 (F8)+4 or (F12)+9 (F8)+5 or (F12)+0

Set QuickCue 2 on Deck D

Set QuickCue 3 on Deck D

Set QuickCue 4 on Deck D

Set QuickCue 5 on Deck D

Select QuickCue 1 on Deck D Select QuickCue 2 on Deck D Select QuickCue 3 on Deck D Select QuickCue 4 on Deck D Select QuickCue 5 on Deck D

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Miscellaneous
Function Clear all effects in a rack Quit key learn mode Delete key assignment Open Torq Preferences Quit Torq Mac Key Shift + Bypass Esc Delete Cmd+ Cmd + Q Windows Key Shift + Bypass Esc Backspace Ctrl+ Alt + F4

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Appendix B: Torq Vinyl Control System

Technical Information and Tips on Torq's Vinyl Control System


By Chad Carrier
When you first experience the thrill of controlling an MP3 file with external vinyl, some of you may feel that it is nothing short of magic. In some ways, this is almost the truth because the system employed in Torq is very complex and subject to numerous variables, all of which can have an impact on its performance. This document will outline, in basic terms, the vinyl tracking system and its workings. Thorough knowledge of this information will help you get better performance from the system and also aid when troubleshooting issues.

An Introduction to Vinyl Tracking


Before starting, we must state that tracking vinyl is no small task, especially when the only mechanism available is a standard tonearm equipped with a standard stylus. There are many more mechanisms for reading the rotation of an object that would yield better results but, as DJ's, this is what we're forced to use. This creates some unique problems that have been solved by various companies in a number of similarly unique ways, all with varying levels of reliability and accuracy. We'll start now by explaining what kinds of information we need in order to make an MP3 (or similar digital audio file) playback under the control of vinyl. There are three things the computer needs to know: The speed of the record, its direction of rotation, and the position of the stylus on the record. The speed will tell the computer how fast to play the audio file. The direction will determine if the file is played forwards or backwards. The position will set the playback location within the file. With all three of these parameters being communicated to the computer at a high enough rate, the results are astounding. The audio file will react as if it's pressed directly on the record. So how can a computer determine these three values by dragging a stylus across some wax? The answer is sound.

How It Works
Each of Torq's Control Vinyl records are imprinted with special audio signals that the computer can listen to in order to determine the speed, direction, and position of playback. In the case of Torq's tracking system, the audio signal is comprised of two parts: The pilot tone and the position stamps. These two audio signals exist simultaneously on the record, but in different frequency bands so they can be analyzed independently of one another. Torq uses the pilot tone to determine two of the three values: speed and direction. The pilot tone itself is actually very simple: It is a sine wave at a fixed frequency that plays throughout the entire duration of the record. If you've ever played with a record before, you'll know that changing the speed of the record causes the pitch (key) of the music to change. For example, if you slow a record down, the pitch of the music will drop.

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Conversely, if you speed up a record, the music will rise in pitch. Torq uses this phenomenon to calculate playback speed by listening to the pitch of the pilot tone. If the pitch drops, that means that the record has been slowed down-Torq then slows down the playback of the audio file by the same amount. If the pitch goes up, that means the record is spinning faster and Torq increases the playback rate of the music. If Torq hears the pilot tone at its original pitch, it means the record is playing at its normal speed (33 1/3 RPM), thus Torq plays the song at its original speed. By listening to the pitch of the pilot tone, Torq can determine speed. But how does it determine direction? The answer is stereo phase-shift. Records are stereo devices and can encode two channels of audio (left and right). The pilot tone is printed onto the record with the left and right channels 90-degrees out-of-phase. When the record plays forward, the right channel will be 90-degrees ahead of the left channel. When the record plays backwards, the right channel will be 90-degrees behind the left channel. Torq evaluates this phase relationship to determine direction of playback. The pilot tone mechanism explained above allows the computer to generate a Velocity value. The velocity is both speed and direction expressed as one number. When the Velocity is 1.000, the record is spinning forward at normal speed. When the Velocity is -1.000, the record is spinning backwards at normal speed. If the Velocity is 0.500, the record is spinning forward but at half its normal speed. If the Velocity is 0.000, the record is stopped. Torq displays the Velocity value for each Deck in the External Control Preferences. The last piece of information needed to properly emulate vinyl control is Position. While you can do scratching just using the Velocity value, you won't be able to perform needle drops or prevent sticker drift without using the Position information. Position is one of the most difficult pieces of the vinyl control puzzle and is also the mechanism that differs most from one vinyl control system to the next. Torq employs a system of position stamps in order to determine playback location on a record. The position stamps are digital numbers encoded as analog audio signals which are placed on the record at regular intervals. In the case of the Torq Control Vinyl, there are about 155 stamps for each revolution of the record. As the stylus passes over a position stamp, Torq can decode it to determine location. Furthermore, the decoding can occur if the record is playing forwards or backwards The Position value is not only determined by the position stamps. Instead, Torq uses the position stamps and Velocity together to determine Position. The reason for this is that the position stamps are coarse. That is, they only occur at periodic intervals across the record instead of being continuous, and there is a certain amount of empty space between each stamp. How can Torq determine position if the needle is between two position stamps? The answer is interpolation. Torq can track Velocity between two stamps (thanks to the continuous pilot tone). Therefore, if Torq reads a little bit of movement after passing over a position stamp, the actual Position will be a value between that position stamp and the next. This final value is displayed as Position on Torq's External Control Preferences. So there you have it: a continuous phase-shifted pilot tone for determining Velocity and thousands of tiny position stamps for determining Position. In theory, this all sounds great, doesn't it? In practice, things are a little more difficult. There are a number of factors that fight this system's reliability including stylus quality, cleanliness, audio isolation, ground hums, and wiring.

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Wreckin' the Records


As explained above, Torq is paying meticulous attention to the audio signals being received from the turntable. A slight variation in pitch represents a change in the speed of the record. The difference between left and right channels helps determine direction and position. If any of these systems are compromised, the tracking system will start to degrade (or completely fail). Sometimes these issues are hard to track down because, during normal usage of Control Vinyl, you're not listening to the sounds from the vinyl-you're listening to the output of the computer. There could be all sorts of noise being picked up by the turntable that doesn't make it to the speakers. The tips below should help you identify the source of such problems as well as identify solutions.

Dust and Dirt


Dust and dirt is the number one cause of vinyl tracking failure. The main reason for this is that the digital DJ uses the same records over and over again throughout the entire performance. This differs from traditional DJing where the record is changed for every song. While a traditional DJ might play 50 records one time each during his set, a digital DJ will play the same control record 50 times. Since the same records stay on the turntables for the entire set, this greatly increases the record's exposure to dirt, dust, and other nasty elements which will quickly build up over time. Even worse, since the same records are used for each performance, many DJ's never remove their vinyl from the turntables, leaving them out to collect dust all day and night. That dust and dirt will collect within the grooves of the record compromising the control signals. Dust and dirt will also collect on the stylus itself, usually looking like a grey ball of dust on the end of the needle. This ball will limit the movement of the stylus which, in turn, distorts the control signals. The obvious solution to this problem is to remain diligent with your cleaning efforts. Clean the records and styli at the beginning of your set and continue to do so throughout the duration. This is extremely important in club environments where dust from smoke machines, cigarettes, dusty ventilation systems, and more can collect extremely fast. This is compounded by the fact that sweat and oils from the DJ's fingers help glue the dust and dirt to the surface of the vinyl. Get into a routine of checking for dust every 5-10 songs. Using products like Discwasher and Gruv Glide will help keep the surface of the vinyl nice and clean.

Cue Burn
The second most common reason for tracking failure is cue burn. Cue burn occurs on all records and is caused by repeatedly dragging the stylus over the same surface of the record over and over again. As the DJ works the record back and forth getting ready to drop it into the mix, the friction built up between the vinyl and stylus increases and turns into heat. This heat, along with the abrasive nature of dragging a sharp point across vinyl, starts to physically distort and destroy the grooves on the record. Once they're destroyed, Torq will no longer be able to track accurately over that section of the record. There are a number of techniques you can use to help limit cue burn on the control records. The first is tracking force of the stylus. Many DJ's will put a lot of weight on their styli, either by adjusting the counterweight on the tonearm or by placing additional weight on the headshell, to help keep the needle from skipping across the record during vigorous scratching. While this may help prevent skipping in some cases, the extra weight makes the stylus dig into the vinyl with even greater force, thus increasing friction and heat, which leads to cue burn. It is recommended that you do not set the weight of the needle any higher than recommended by the stylus manufacturer. Setting the proper weight will increase the life of the vinyl.

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Another technique that can be used by digital DJ's is Relative tracking mode in the software. When using Relative mode, Torq ignores the position of the needle on the record. When you load up a new track onto a Deck, you can place the needle anywhere on the record and the music will start from the beginning once you start the record. By putting the needle in a different place, it keeps you from burning the same area of the record over and over again, thus extending life Lastly, Torq has a Lead-In preference that offsets the start of the music relative to the start of the control vinyl. If you've burned the beginning of the vinyl, increment the Lead-In by one. This will add a rotation to the record before music starts. Once the new area is burned, increment the Lead-In again. Each increment will make the music start further into the record.

Ground Hum
One factor that can inhibit the functionality of the vinyl tracking is a ground loop. A ground loop manifests itself as a low hum or buzz in the audio system, a noise that never stops even when the record is not playing. As explained earlier, Torq listens to the pitch of the pilot tone to determine speed and direction. Torq can become confused if there is a ground hum mixed in with the pilot signal. Torq might lock to the ground hum instead of the pilot tone causing the playback speed to be incorrect. It could also contaminate the position stamps making them impossible to read (position stamps are scattered throughout the audio spectrum). If you listen to the record directly (such as by clicking the Line In button in Torq), you should be able to hear if a ground loop is present. If so, you'll need to change the wiring of your system, possibly plugging the turntable(s) into different power outlets or by changing the location of the turntables. Once the ground hum is gone, tracking will be improved.

Stereo Separation
The vinyl tracking system relies on two channels of audio signals (left and right) played back from the control vinyl. Torq will judge the phase-offset and other aspects of the signals to determine direction and position. If the left and right channels are not separate when they enter the computer, Torq will not be able to perform any phase-offset calculations and the system will fail. There are two main causes of poor stereo separation: wiring and stylus. The first problem will occur if there is a short or other problem with the wiring/connections of the turntable to the computer. If there is a short in the turntable that causes left and right channels to mix together (even partially), Torq won't work properly. Similarly, if the stylus/cartridge is worn to the point where signals on the left are bleeding through into the right (or vice versa), the vinyl control system will also fail. This problem can be difficult to diagnose-a turntable test record is recommended. The test record will play sounds isolated to one channel or the other. If you hear the sound out of both channels when it should be out of only one, then you've got a stereo separation problem. Try a new stylus/cartridge. If that doesn't fix the problem, have the turntable checked by a professional.

Poor Frequency Response


Torq's position stamps are scattered throughout the audio frequency spectrum. Some digits will be in the low (bass) frequencies while others will be in the high (treble) frequencies. In order for Torq to read all the digits in a position stamp, you will need a stylus/cartridge that outputs this wide spectrum of audio frequencies. If you have a worn out needle, the high-frequency signals might not be reproduced properly, making it difficult for Torq to read the position stamps. If you find that scratching works but needle drops don't, you may have a worn needle.
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Audio Isolation
As with the ground loop issue above, any other audio signals infecting the vinyl control signals will cause problems. This can happen if the turntable is not physically isolated from the room. A great example of this is when a turntable is set up close to a sub-woofer. The vibrations of the sub-woofer will travel through the floor, up the stand that is holding the turntable, through the base of the turntable up to the platter, then into the needle. These bass frequencies can confuse Torq, causing Torq to lock to the erroneous bass instead of the proper pilot tone. When this happens, you'll frequently hear playback problems when the bass is heavy (this might sound like a fast warbling of pitch coinciding with the bass). Phonographs are very delicate devices and care needs to be taken to ensure no unnecessary noise is making its way into the control signals.

Wiring
Torq is listening to phase-relationships in the left and right channels of the control signals. If you have the turntable hooked up backwards (such that the left channel plays into the computer's right channel), the vinyl control system won't work properly. The most obvious consequence of wiring backwards is that the music will play backwards while the record is spinning forwards. If this happens, swap your left and right connections.

Signal Levels
Earlier, we discussed the phenomenon where slowing down playback of a record causes the pitch to drop. In addition to this, slowing the record will also cause the overall volume to drop. The slower the record, the quieter the signals. If you are using Torq in a noisy environment or with a needle that has very low output, Torq may loose the ability to hear the control signals when the record is moved slowly. Try using a stylus/cartridge with very high signal output. Otherwise, you will have to lower the Power Threshold in Torq's External Control Preferences. If you lower the value too much, the music will never stop moving even if you stop the control vinyl (it will move just a little as Torq responds to almost any sound that is picked up by the turntable). If the value is set too high, Torq will stop playback before the turntable has come to a complete stop.

Pitch Phenomenon
We mentioned earlier that Torq determines playback rate by listening to the pitch of the pilot tone. When the record slows, the pitch of the pilot tone drops. Well, it turns out that the pitch of the position stamps is also affected: they drop when the record slows down and they rise when the record speeds up. This poses two problems: When the record is moved slower, the pilot tone and position stamps will occupy an area at the low end of the frequency spectruma portion which is usually infected by some amount of ground hum or other mechanical noise. This makes tracking become more difficult as the record slows. Often, as a consequence, you'll find that you can still scratch at slow speeds but you will not be able to perform needle drops. Conversely, when the record is moved very quickly, this forces the pilot tone and the position stamps to rise in pitchpossibly beyond the range where the stylus can reproduce them properly. If this occurs, the signals heard by Torq could be distorted and tracking will not perform correctly. As a result, the pilot tone and position stamps are placed within a narrow frequency band, thus allowing these signals to be read as best as possible when the record is moving slow or fast. This is also the reason for ensuring that there are no ground hums, mechanical noise, or bass being picked up by the turntable as these frequencies will mask the control signals at low velocities.

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Best Practices
Aside from the troubleshooting tips above, there are a few other things you can adopt as common practice to make sure your DJ sets go off without a hitch:

Always Carry Extra Control Vinyl


DJ's typically take more music to a gig than they would ever play-they do this so that they are prepared for any eventuality that could arise. That same logic suggests that you should take multiple copies of control vinyl with you to the gig so you are similarly prepared for any event that could damage the records. It's wise to start the gig with at least two copies of the control vinyl per turntable.

Use Both Sides of the Control Vinyl


While the control signals are technically different on the two sides of the Control Vinyl, Torq will treat them the same. Therefore, try to use both sides of the record to help distribute wear by flipping them over every other song.

Keep Your Hands Clean


As mentioned earlier, the sweat and oils on your fingers will attract dust and dirt to the record's surface. This isn't as noticeable a problem when changing records every song like a traditional DJ, but when using the same records over and over again all night, the problem pronounces itself much more quickly. This is aggravated even more if you're continually drinking from dirty bar glasses and bottles or snacking on foods. A clean towel and wet wipes are good to use regularly so you're not inadvertently transferring junk to your records.

Our Lady Pinky


The Vinyl and CD Control System used in Torq is developed by Baby Talk FX, LLC and is covered by US Patent 7,273,980. Baby Talk FX, LLC has been bringing you digital vinyl realness since 2003 and would like to remind you that It may not be the real thing, but at least you're playing with vinyl. Enjoy!

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Appendix C: Warranty

Warranty Terms
Avid warrants products to be free from defects in materials and workmanship, under normal use and provided that the product is owned by the original, registered user. Visit www.m-audio.com/warranty for terms and limitations applying to your specific product.

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Avid
5795 Martin Road Irwindale, CA 91706-6211 USA

Technical Support (USA)


Visit the Online Support Center at www.avid.com/support

Product Information
For company and product information, visit us on the web at www.avid.com

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