How to Use WAV Launcher: A Step-by-Step Guide for Beginners
What WAV Launcher is
WAV Launcher is a lightweight sample-triggering tool for quickly loading and playing WAV files (drums, one-shots, loops) via MIDI or the computer keyboard. It’s designed for live performance and fast sketching: low latency, simple mapping, and easy routing to a DAW or audio interface.
Before you start
- System: Windows or macOS (check your version compatibility).
- Audio interface/outputs: Ensure correct device selected.
- MIDI controller (optional): USB MIDI keyboard or pad controller.
- Sample files: WAV files organized in folders.
Step-by-step setup
- Download and install
- Get the latest WAV Launcher installer from the developer’s site and run the installer.
- Start the app and set audio device
- Open WAV Launcher.
- In Audio Settings, choose your audio driver (ASIO on Windows for lowest latency) and select the output device.
- Set MIDI input (optional)
- In MIDI Settings, enable your MIDI controller so pads/keys send note triggers to WAV Launcher.
- Create a bank and load samples
- Create a new bank (or set) for a performance.
- Drag-and-drop WAV files onto pads or slots. Each slot corresponds to a MIDI note or internal keyboard key.
- Map pads to MIDI notes / keys
- Click a pad’s mapping option and assign a MIDI note or computer key. Many users map pads C1–C3 to a 16-pad controller.
- Adjust per-sample settings
- Set gain, pan, start offset, loop on/off, and one-shot vs. gated mode.
- Tweak envelope settings (attack/release) if available to avoid clicks.
- Route audio to your DAW (optional)
- Use virtual audio bus (or ReWire/VST/AU if WAV Launcher supports it) to route each pad or the master output into separate DAW tracks, or record the master mix.
- Test latency and performance
- Play pads or keys while monitoring latency. Lower buffer size for less latency; increase if you hear glitches.
- Save your bank
- Save the bank/set so you can recall the layout and mappings later.
- Perform or record
- Trigger samples live, sequence MIDI patterns in your DAW, or record stems.
Performance tips
- Use ASIO drivers and a low-latency buffer (64–128 samples) for live use.
- Pre-warp or trim samples to remove silence and reduce memory usage.
- Freeze or bounce large banks to audio in your DAW if CPU becomes a bottleneck.
- Group similar samples into banks (drums, FX, vocals) for quick access.
Troubleshooting common issues
- No sound: Check audio device, master volume, and pad mute states.
- Stuttering: Increase buffer size, close background apps, or reduce number of simultaneous voices.
- MIDI not responding: Ensure MIDI device is enabled in settings and not grabbed by another app.
Quick reference (common shortcuts)
- Load sample: Drag-and-drop
- Save bank: Ctrl/Cmd+S
- Toggle pad mute: Click pad or assigned key
If you want, I can draft a printable one-page cheat sheet with mappings and settings tailored to your controller and DAW.
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