Introduction
in the console (each channel, monitor, effect return, aux send, and group output). It features its own ADAT Synchronization Interface jack, plus MIDI in/out jacks, so that its
Control room monitoring is made simpler by
Basic Principles of Mixing & Multitrack Recording
The function of the X2 Mixer, or any recording console for that matter, is to provide control of volume, tone and spatial positioning of signals from microphones, electronic instruments, and tape machines, and then to route these signals to a monitor system and tape recorder so they can be recorded and heard. Before the introduction of multitrack tape recorders, these signals had to be mixed together as a live performance. If the desired performance wasn’t correct because of a musical mistake or mixing problem, the performance had to be recorded again and again until the performance was deemed satisfactory.
The introduction of multitrack tape machines has changed this recording method forever. Most recording today has evolved into a
Recording/Tracking
Instead of needing an entire musical group to come together in order to capture a live performance, recordings can be made one instrument at a time and pieced together in a building block fashion. With the advent of drum machines and sequencers (such as the Alesis
Using this method of recording an instrument at a time allows for fixing mistakes (normally called “punching in”) of an incorrectly played part. By “punching in,” or replacing, the misplayed part, you can record a performance over and over again until it’s perfect.
Monitoring
In order to properly record a performance, both the engineer, producer and all of the players must be able to hear the performance. When listening to the speakers in a control room (where the mixer is), this is called monitoring; when the musicians are listening to headphones while overdubbing, this is called cueing. Adjustments to monitor or cue mixes should not affect the mix going to the recorder, so that recording levels remain at the optimum, even if the performer requires less of a particular instrument in the headphones.
Monitoring is a more complex operation than it might seem at first, since there are many mixes that occur simultaneously. Often there are 3 separate mixes (sometimes
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