Nomega's How TO Mix Part 1 of 2
Uploader Comments (NomegaStudios)
All Comments (15)
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It's weird how he's a sound mix guy, yet the sound quality of this video is so crappy.
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@axxed334 Buses are the path or transportation that connects the signal to the aux.
Aux is the one "giving assistance" to the sender (main audio). So we're talking about 3 different things here. Source audio, Bus, & Aux. some tends to call aux as bus because bus always connects to aux.
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this dude f***ing sucksss
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them ringing from the acoustic and drums destory the vid
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What is Moe-no?
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thanx :)
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no, they're technically not the same, an auxiliary is a Channel, while a bus is like a virtual cable. You send a certain amount of the signal (sometimes 100%) through that cable (the bus) and output it through an auxiliary channel. Hope this helped
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grouping's good for if you wanna turn down the volume of all the guitars or just the drums etc. nice
(Benson and Tonic)
e that is so nice so nice so profesional...
str8fame1 1 year ago
@str8fame1 Thanks.
NomegaStudios 1 year ago
Hi...what are busses also called auxilaries?
axxed334 2 years ago
Are busses also called auxs? Yes they are. Busses are called auxs, groups as well as groups depeding on what daw system you're using or what engineer you're using. Groups in nuendo/cubase, auxs in pro-tools and they are busses because of there reference to routing a signal. Thanks for your amazing question. - Johnny
NomegaStudios 2 years ago
I'm using the auxilary channels which are also called busses. I route all main as well as misc. tracks to them for the purpose group effects, central volume and cpu power preservation. Thanks for your excellant question. - Johnny Nomega
NomegaStudios 2 years ago