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#1
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is a hardware mixer necessary for computer recording
If you have a good sequencer, soundcard, preamp, mic, and computer, do you really need an external mixer? Can you just use a sequencer like DP3 or cubase to mix your music? The only positives I see of having one is for multiple inputs. Would it just be more useful to have a control surface for your computer like the event ezbus??
--lothar |
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#2
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Quote:
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![]() Jaymz
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Keep Rockin' and Rollin'...
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#3
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i use an external mixer so that i can hear all my midi stuff before i record it as audio. i figure, its easier to do an interpolate in Sonar to "compress" the synth sound, than to do real compression after the midi is recorded to audio. i have a mackie 1604 vlz pro.
i use a control surface for mixing after all my tracks are in the computer. i just started using the control surface (Tascam US-428) extensively about 2 months ago. i'm finding that its much easier to do mutes and volume changes with physical faders and button instead of a mouse. |
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#4
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and external mixer sounds better to me. it sounds more "round". vs. bouncing to disk
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"...if the opposite of pro is a con lets go beyond this, the opposite of CONgress must be PROgress..." Cage |
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#5
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a mixer with MIDI is the best deal, really.. cuz it can double as a control surface.
You need a mixer if you do a lot of more-than-one player at a time recording. For Headphone mixes and monitoring, mostly. xoxo |
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#6
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Lothar of the hill people!!!
Sorry, just had to get that out of my system. ![]() |
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