Greg_L wrote: ↑Wed Nov 14, 2018 9:20 am
Lol. Wtf. All that for guitars?
Lol...And I thought I used a lotta tracks for a song...Holy fuck Jdude!!!
BTW, if you have your tcp (track control panel) collapsed too small horizontally you can't see the folder buttons...
Armistice wrote: ↑Wed Nov 14, 2018 7:28 pm
How I get to work when there's a train strike...
Ok,
to me, a "buss" would basically be a master volume for a group of instruments...I use Reaper, & I really don't know anything about Studio One, but I'm gonna guess most daw's are pretty similar...
In Reaper click on the track you want to be the "master" by clicking the folder button (it's in the track control panel, where the waveforms are), then figure out which you want to be the last track in the folder & click it twice...You can visually see the TCP change when you make a track a folder and/or the last track in that folder...That's just how I do it, I lump all my tracks in groups like guitars, bass, drums, reverb, etc...
Reaper Folder.PNG
You can do things with the send/return on each track, like turn the "master" off for individual tracks, where their output only goes through the folder, set up side-chains & things like that, but it's not a have-to thing...There really are no rules to all this stuff, if it sounds good, that's all that matters...
Alison wrote: ↑Tue Nov 13, 2018 7:22 pm
Okay, silly question but, can someone explain "bussing" to me? I have yet to find an explanation in plain English!
Trying to figure out exactly what it is good for!
Sorry I wasn't much help for Studio One, but I do see our Rebel resident SweetDan uses it & is on the ball here...
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.