Chapter 28: Basic Mixing
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Chapter 28: Basic Mixing
In addition to the final mixdown, mixing tasks
can occur any time during a recording session.
This chapter covers Pro Tools mixing, including
audio signal flow, output and bus paths, sends,
and signal routing for submixing and mixdown.
During mixing, real-time plug-ins and hardware
inserts provide effects and signal processing (see
Chapter 29, “Plug-in and Hardware Inserts”).
Mixing Concepts
Mixing involves making decisions about ele-
ments such as volume levels, panning, and ef-
fects. These mixing decisions are initially based
on what you hear in your studio. While you can
control many variables in your studio (such as
speakers and room acoustics), you cannot con-
trol the listening environment in which your fi-
nal mix will be heard. The following tips include
a few ways to make sure your mix will sound as
good as possible to as many listeners as possible:
Alternate Speakers and Reference
Monitoring
Listen to your mixes on a variety of
different speakers, to gauge how well the mix
will translate. By listening to a mix through dif-
ferent playback systems, you are attempting to
anticipate what the intended audience will hear.
Reference Mixes
Tapes and discs of rough mixes
let you audition mixes outside the studio in dif-
ferent listening environments
.
Format Compatibility Monitoring
Stereo mixes
must often be mono-compatible. When you are
mixing in multichannel surround, mixes may
also need to be compatible with stereo or mono
playback systems (see the
Pro Tools Sync & Sur-
round Concepts Guide
).
Metering and Calibration
Meters provide a visual display of signal levels.
They tell whether signal is getting to a channel,
and how loud or soft a signal is relative to
(above or below) “0.”
By calibrating all your equipment to standard
reference levels, a consistent level can be
achieved (and metered) among different record-
ing devices in a studio, throughout a facility, or
throughout an entire production chain of a fea-
ture-length film. For example, a level of
–18 dBFS coming out of a DAT deck should play
and meter at –18 dBFS in Pro Tools.
Use the Calibration Reference Level option
(in the Operations Preferences page) to set a
default calibration reference level when
Pro Tools is in Calibration mode.
For audio interfaces that have trims (such
as the 192 I/O), see the interface’s guide for
calibration instructions.
Summary of Contents for Pro Tools
Page 1: ...Pro Tools Reference Guide Version 7 3 ...
Page 15: ...1 Part I Introduction ...
Page 16: ...2 ...
Page 33: ...19 Part II System Configuration ...
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Page 44: ...Pro Tools Reference Guide 30 ...
Page 94: ...Pro Tools Reference Guide 80 ...
Page 95: ...81 Part III Sessions Tracks ...
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Page 108: ...Pro Tools Reference Guide 94 ...
Page 130: ...Pro Tools Reference Guide 116 ...
Page 269: ...255 Part IV Recording ...
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Page 310: ...Pro Tools Reference Guide 296 ...
Page 345: ...331 Part V Editing ...
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Page 571: ...557 Part VI MIDI Editing ...
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Page 637: ...623 Part VII Mixing ...
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Page 771: ...757 Part VIII Video Sync Surround ...
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