avieth said:
I'm not sure if completely understand buses.. Are they just groups of tracks?
Anyway.. what I've done is put all my drum tracks on one bus. But I don't know if that bus should go to the master bus, and then out to the monitors... or should the drums bus just go right to the output, bypassing the master bus.
Traditionally in analog, when you think of the term "Bus" (or Buss, whatever you prefer), you would automatically think about a
Summing Amp. Then maybe you would have nightmares about networks of opamps, resistors, capacitors, relay switches, transformers...the list goes on.
In the analog world, the power of processing multiple tracks into a bottleneck location falls under how good a summing amp you have. That's why large format consoles (like SSL) are still the best mediums to mix on today.
Phyl said what had to be said, a bus is a central point for all signals routed to that point. So that's about accurate.
However, if you're working digtal, then of course that changes. Instead of actual electronic components, your signals are processed via mathemics (algorhythms). The better the electornics (analog) or math (digital), the better those summed signals will sound at that buss. So we're implying preserved and optimal dynamic range, width, imaging, bandwidth, clarity, low or zero distortion, free of noise of any kind, etc.
You can subgroup (drums, string instruments, etc) things before you hit the stereo buss. This allows you to organize your tracks and also process things as a whole rather than individually. But eventually they *all* go through the stereo buss by default. That's just the way signal flow works.
On a large format console, you'd find a routing matrix that lets your transfer your signal all around the console. So if you wanted, you can actually send your input signal on track one all the way over to track 70 on the other side of the console. But ultimately, for that signal to be heard, it has to make it to the
stereo buss. Also known as LF, LF Mix, mix buss, master buss, master fader, LCRS (for surround) etc.
It's really just a more sophisticated system of what you may find on a small consumer mixer. That's why if you can get a whole of and understand audio signal flow and learn to read board schematics, then it's really easy to see how that works. All boards will have a buss, whether it's a million dollar board or a 12 channel mackie.
But to keep things simple, a buss is really just a collection points for all your signals, that's it.
What you hear in your speakers is a
monitor of the stereo mix. You are therefore monitoring the stereo buss. In other words, what you hear is what you get.
The only time that really changes is if you decide to route certain signals out of your board via anything except your main outs.