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| quote: | Originally posted by Pagan-za
Thats easy.
What I do often, is group things on the mixer channel so that its easy to apply FX to entire groups.
I usually group things like bassline, leads, vocals, pads all together.
The way I do is is just to disable routing to the master channel, and then send them all to the same channel on the mixer. Its exactly like using a send, except you just bus to a mixer channel instead.
As for your specific question, send the pads to their own group, then just put a filter on that and automate its cutoff. Easy as pie.
Using groups like this is a great way to apply FX to overall sounds, for example minor sidechaining on the leads and pads. Or if you want to use a flanger or phaser, its much easier on the group than setting up multiple copies and then automating them all. |
Hey, sounds great man, thanks for the reply. However, I tried doing the rerouting thing last night, and it screwed up the sends for all my channels but I luckily was able to fix that and rerouted all the channels to the master channel again. Can you just quickly explain how I can disable a specific channel from being routed to the master channel and instead route it to a new mixer channel? Or at least point me to a thread discussing the matter? Because as soon as I figure out how that's done, I can definitely go on from there with the automating and stuff.
Lastly, even if I reroute each groups of instruments (pads, leads, etc..) to a separate group mixer channel (a channel for the pads, another for the leads, etc...) is there a way to then route these group channels back to the master channel again? Just in case I want to apply an effect an effect to all the tracks later? Like a limiter, compression, etc.
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