M
Mike Freze
New member
I am confused about a few terms (or practices) concerning overdubbing, double tracking, and multi-tracking.
1. When you overdub on one recorded track, my understanding is that you play back that track and at the same time you also have record going so you can add (overdub) other sounds on to that one track. Then when you play back, it's all together there on one track. If this is true, you can't later edit what you dubbed.
2. You can also overdub if you recorded a track, then did your add ons to a different track while playing back the original track to hear what was first recorded. This way, your "dubs" are on a separate track. When both play back together, they sound the same as if you had overdubbed just on one track only.
Am I understanding this correctly? If you can edit the dubbing by doing this on separate tracks, then why ever overdub to one track at all? The only reason I can see is that maybe there would be too many separate tracks in your project if you separated everything into all these tracks every time you want to overdub that it would be too much to look at when mixing all at once.
3. Double or triple tracking. How is this different than overdubbing? Let's say you record a source vocal track. Then you record another vocal track of the similar performance to blend with the first track to give a warmer, richer sound. OK. But why wouldn't you just overdub (re-record the same vocal performance) over the original track to get the same effect? You would have to bounce double or triple tracks together anyway when you mixdown.
4. Is multi-tracking the same thing as double or triple tracking in a recording software program? What about LAYERING: is that overdubbing on one track or separate tracking (like double tracking) to get the sound you want?
Mike
1. When you overdub on one recorded track, my understanding is that you play back that track and at the same time you also have record going so you can add (overdub) other sounds on to that one track. Then when you play back, it's all together there on one track. If this is true, you can't later edit what you dubbed.
2. You can also overdub if you recorded a track, then did your add ons to a different track while playing back the original track to hear what was first recorded. This way, your "dubs" are on a separate track. When both play back together, they sound the same as if you had overdubbed just on one track only.
Am I understanding this correctly? If you can edit the dubbing by doing this on separate tracks, then why ever overdub to one track at all? The only reason I can see is that maybe there would be too many separate tracks in your project if you separated everything into all these tracks every time you want to overdub that it would be too much to look at when mixing all at once.
3. Double or triple tracking. How is this different than overdubbing? Let's say you record a source vocal track. Then you record another vocal track of the similar performance to blend with the first track to give a warmer, richer sound. OK. But why wouldn't you just overdub (re-record the same vocal performance) over the original track to get the same effect? You would have to bounce double or triple tracks together anyway when you mixdown.
4. Is multi-tracking the same thing as double or triple tracking in a recording software program? What about LAYERING: is that overdubbing on one track or separate tracking (like double tracking) to get the sound you want?
Mike