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#1
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hello,
i've been using sonar 2.2 for awhile now to record n arrange guitars,vocals, bass for some songs... i'm wondering how helpful it is to have a mixer? thinkin about getting one... i've been using just the onscreen mixing consoles/mouse to do it, but those of you who have a mixer unit, is this a big time-saver? other benefits? thanks... |
#2
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What else would you sit in front of
when someone takes your picture ? My console is used for it's mic preamps and channel EQ and ... well ... it's mixing abilty. Not neccesarily a time saver just a different way of working. If you have much in the way of outboard processing/effects the console comes in handy. Even more so for monitoring during tracking. rd |
#4
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wrote in message
oups.com hello, i've been using sonar 2.2 for awhile now to record n arrange guitars,vocals, bass for some songs... i'm wondering how helpful it is to have a mixer? thinkin about getting one... i've been using just the onscreen mixing consoles/mouse to do it, but those of you who have a mixer unit, is this a big time-saver? other benefits? Mixers are helpful, even in a context of 100% DAW signal path production methods. They are an economical way to obtain a bunch of mic preamps, and they assist with monitoring during tracking and mixing. |
#5
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If it's mostly just you recording yourself and maybe a friend or two, a
mixer might not be that useful. I have ProTools LE at home and got rid of any sort of mixer a few years ago. Not having a mixer cleared up some valuable space. I put the money into quality outboard preamps. What do you need the mixer for, exactly? Cheers, Trevor de Clercq wrote: hello, i've been using sonar 2.2 for awhile now to record n arrange guitars,vocals, bass for some songs... i'm wondering how helpful it is to have a mixer? thinkin about getting one... i've been using just the onscreen mixing consoles/mouse to do it, but those of you who have a mixer unit, is this a big time-saver? other benefits? thanks... |
#6
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I thought havin a mixer would ease some eye/hand fatigue... i'm using a
m-audio firewire 410 to input vocals/instruments and it has built-in preamps... and yeah, i would be recording mostly be for me and a few other people... i'm a newbie at this and it seems like everyone says that a mixer is part of a basic home recording set-up so was just asking the necessity of it given the mixing capabilies of sonar 2.2 and other recording software out there.. |
#7
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In article .com,
wrote: I thought havin a mixer would ease some eye/hand fatigue... i'm using a m-audio firewire 410 to input vocals/instruments and it has built-in preamps... and yeah, i would be recording mostly be for me and a few other people... i'm a newbie at this and it seems like everyone says that a mixer is part of a basic home recording set-up so was just asking the necessity of it given the mixing capabilies of sonar 2.2 and other recording software out there.. Personally I cannot even imagine mixing with a mouse. It just seems like the most painful way of working possible. I could see wanting to use a mixer-like interface like the HUI, though, and you might prefer that over having a real mixer if you are working entirely on the computer. I'd certainly go the regular console route, personally, but that's me. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#8
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"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message
In article .com, wrote: I thought havin a mixer would ease some eye/hand fatigue... i'm using a m-audio firewire 410 to input vocals/instruments and it has built-in preamps... and yeah, i would be recording mostly be for me and a few other people... i'm a newbie at this and it seems like everyone says that a mixer is part of a basic home recording set-up so was just asking the necessity of it given the mixing capabilies of sonar 2.2 and other recording software out there.. Personally I cannot even imagine mixing with a mouse. It just seems like the most painful way of working possible. I could see wanting to use a mixer-like interface like the HUI, though, and you might prefer that over having a real mixer if you are working entirely on the computer. I'd certainly go the regular console route, personally, but that's me. I take it you never got into volume envelopes? |
#9
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message I could see wanting to use a mixer-like interface like the HUI, though, and you might prefer that over having a real mixer if you are working entirely on the computer. I'd certainly go the regular console route, personally, but that's me. I take it you never got into volume envelopes? Most automated consoles can do volume envelopes without any problem. Although personally, I prefer musicians who can control their dynamics in the first place. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#11
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"Mike Rivers" wrote in message
news:znr1106699637k@trad These days people who want to get away from the eye strain and repetitive motion stress of mixing with a mouse choose the "control surface" route - a box that looks like a mixer, but which passes no audio (some have mic preamps and/or monitor source switching) and controls the computer DAW's mixer. The part I see missing is where PC DAW uses have the option to shortcut the mixing with a mouse problem by going whole-hog into the nonlinear editing paradigm. IOW you don't sit there and try to simulate using a real-world mixing console with a mouse, you just draw in a volume envelope with a few mouse clicks and get on with it. |
#12
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Well if you're just trying to reduce eye/hand fatigue, maybe you only
need a MIDI controller for your software. Having an D/A and A/D stage, plus running your audio through a potentially inexpensive mixer, might actually do more harm to your sound quality than good. I'm not sure which controllers work with Sonar, but we have some Mackie Controls here that work pretty well with ProTools. I also noticed Behringer has just made a sub-$300 knock-off of the Mackie Control, so that would probably be a cheap way to try it out. Cheers, Trevor de Clercq wrote: I thought havin a mixer would ease some eye/hand fatigue... i'm using a m-audio firewire 410 to input vocals/instruments and it has built-in preamps... and yeah, i would be recording mostly be for me and a few other people... i'm a newbie at this and it seems like everyone says that a mixer is part of a basic home recording set-up so was just asking the necessity of it given the mixing capabilies of sonar 2.2 and other recording software out there.. |
#14
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#15
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