Audio Authoring For Dolby Atmos®

Nuendo is the premier DAW to offer a complete ‘in the box’ solution for Dolby Atmos content creation. You can import an existing ADM file, create an entirely new Dolby Atmos project from scratch or convert a channel-based project to a Dolby Atmos mixing with almost no effort. With the integrated Renderer for Dolby Atmos, you can author, mix and deliver Dolby Atmos-compliant ADM Broadcast Wave files and, at the same time, the final stems in different surround configurations.

Getting started

A post-production project usually consists of many mono audio tracks — containing the dialog and sound effects clips — and group channels that organize the sounds in submixes or stems. For an object-based mix this basic structure can be preserved, as it already offers many advantages. Depending on the delivery requirements, the ADM project will comprise one or multiple beds — for example, background sound and music — and a number of objects, including the dialog, Foley and other sound effects.

Importing ADM files

If your project starts with an ADM file — e.g. from the Dolby Atmos Production Suite — you can easily import it into a Nuendo project for further mixing or editing with the object automation intact. Bed and object audio channels, pan automation, program-level metadata and Group structure are all supported, with audio from ADM extracted to tracks in the Nuendo project. Folder tracks are created to represent the ADM Program/Group structure, while object tracks are assigned to the VST MultiPanner, with existing pan automation.

Renderer for Dolby Atmos

When monitoring an object-based project, all the audio will be routed through the Renderer for Dolby Atmos. The Renderer supports 2.0, Binaural, 5.1, 7.1, 5.1.4, 7.1.4 and 9.1.6 configurations. The configuration of the output bus will determine the maximum channel width of the rendering output and should match the speaker configuration of the room.
The Renderer can only be used with a project sample rate of 48 kHz and an ASIO buffer size of 512 samples.

Setup Assistant

With the Setup Assistant, the steps to convert a channel-based project to a Dolby Atmos mixing project are performed automatically. The Setup Assistant will create a straightforward Dolby Atmos configuration with the internal Renderer for Dolby Atmos. This will include creating a new Main Mix output channel in the desired configuration, with the Renderer plug-in inserted, and a bed group channel with the option of having all project tracks routed to it.

Adding beds

Beds are channel-based submixes, very much like the stems in an existing project. In Nuendo you can have up to 64 beds. If additional beds are required, start by creating a group channel for each bed (if it does not yet exist) – for example two 7.1 groups for the background sound and the music. All tracks routed to these groups will be part of the bed mixes. In the ADM Authoring window, create the necessary beds and use the previously created group channels as sources.

Creating objects

Any audio track in a project can become an ADM object. You can create objects in the Authoring window and then assign any of the audio tracks from the project as the source. To convert an existing Nuendo project with a large amount of audio tracks into an object-based project, you can just select the tracks in the project window, go to the Authoring window and use the Create Objects from Selected Tracks function. The new objects will automatically be created with their audio routed through the Renderer.

Binaural Monitoring

If a Dolby Atmos speaker setup is not available, binaural sound mixing over headphones can be used to provide the immersive sound experience with the required spatial accuracy. The Renderer for Dolby Atmos offers a binaural re-render of the Dolby Atmos mix. Rendering all Bed and Object inputs, it allows the replication of an immersive, multi-channel audio experience in headphones. You can choose to use the standard Dolby head-related transfer function (HRTF) filters, or create Dolby Atmos Personalized Rendering. (https://professional.dolby.com/phrtf)

Mixing

Objects and beds are monitored through the Renderer, which means their audio is not summed in the MixConsole. During the mixing process, you will only listen to the Renderer's output.
Otherwise the usual channel-mixing techniques can be used, but with new and creative possibilities for immersive panning. Writing automation in the VST MultiPanner will transmit panning information as metadata to the Renderer, which will then pan the signal accordingly, in real time.

Exporting ADM

When exporting an object-based project, the master file must keep all objects separated. Beds and objects in the Authoring window can be exported as an ADM Broadcast Wave file. The file will contain all audio objects and beds, as well as all dynamic panning metadata and static metadata. It will also include rendering instructions for the playback device. When loaded into a playback system, an ADM mastering application, another DAW that supports Dolby Atmos or other Dolby encoders, the metadata will be applied.

Creating a channel-based downmix

The Renderer can also create a channel-based, downmix version of the object-based mix. In the Renderer panel, choose the surround (or stereo) format to which you want to downmix your project. In the Export Audio Mixdown window, select the channel containing the Renderer plug-in and use the Split Channels option. This will produce the correct number of audio files for your downmix, plus a number of files with no audio you can ignore.