Behringer SX4882 DJ Equipment User Manual


 
23 EURODESK SX4882 User Manual
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Professional 24-Track Studio16.
Recording16.1
Chances are you’ll occasionally want to record more than eight tracks at once,
e.g. ou’re recording a band playing together live. The following example covers a
rock band with drums, bass, two guitars, percussionist, brass section, lead and
backing vocals. In the real world, you’ll hardly ever be taking all these artists at
once, but if you are:
Channels Source Route Destination
1 Kick Direct out Track 2
2 Snare Direct out Track 3
3 Hi Hat Direct out Track 4
4 Tom 1 Subgroups 5 and 6 Tracks 5 and 6
5 Tom 2 Subgroups 5 and 6 Tracks 5 and 6
6 Tom 3 Subgroups 5 and 6 Tracks 5 and 6
7 Tom 4 Subgroups 5 and 6 Tracks 5 and 6
8 Cymbals (overheads) L Direct out Track 7
9 Cymbals (overheads) R Direct out Track 8
10 Bass microphone Subgroup 3 Track 1
11 Bass DI Subgroup 3 Track 1
12 Escaping prisoners Subgroup 4 Who knows?
13 Trumpet Subgroups 1 and 2 Tracks 9 and 10
14 Trombone Subgroups 1 and 2 Tracks 9 and 10
15 Sax Subgroups 1 and 2 Tracks 9 and 10
16 BVs 1 Subgroups 7 and 8 Tracks 11 and 12
17 BVs 2 Subgroups 7 and 8 Tracks 11 and 12
18 BVs 3 Subgroups 7 and 8 Tracks 11 and 12
19 Conga L Direct out Track 13
20 Conga R Direct out Track 14
21 Guitar 1 microphone Direct out Track 15
22 Guitar 2 microphone Direct out Track 16
23 Lead vocal Direct out Track 17
Tab. 16.1: Channel assignment
Tape Monitoring will be via MIX-B in tape return mode. Once tracks are layed,
they will be ipped onto the A-channels (1 to 17), and overdubbing can
commence via tracks 18 to 24. Also “bouncing”, reducing several tracks onto one
or a stereo pair, requires access to the full routing matrix. This is available to the
A-channels, but not the B-channels.
Very tricky headphones16.2
In a multi-musician scenario you’ll probably want as many dierent headphones
mixes as you can muster. With the current channel/group/track assignments it
is possible to set up four independent, or semi-independent, headphone feeds
while still keeping back auxes 3/4/5/6 for “wet” monitoring (see 16.3).
Subgroup 7 => aux return 3 =>
headphones 1
Subgroup 8 => aux return 4 =>
headphones 2
Main mix (and)/or MIX-B =>
headphones 1
Main mix (and)/or MIX-B =>
headphones 2
Active switches: S55/(S82, S77)/S76 Active switches: S69/(S82, S89)/S88
See also g. 14.4 “Subgroup-driven auxless headphones mix” and
associated text.
In the above conguration
HP 1
and
HP 2
comprise a blend of the main mix,
MIX-B and an additional feed from a subgroup. The subgroup feed can be used to
select which channel(s) should be boosted in the cans relative to the main mixes.
Choose to send to subgroups 7 and 8 from channels which are routed
to tape from their DIRECT OUT. Otherwise CHANNEL PAN, which will
already have been set for recording via another group, is unlikely to be
pointing to where you want the cue signal to go. Aux sends 1 and 2 are
available as two separate mono headphone feeds, or as a single stereo
headphone feed. You’ll need an extra stereo amplifier to amplify the
aux 1 and 2 outputs to drive headphones properly.
Overdubbing:
It’s all change. Flip the recorded music onto A-channels, in order to feed from
tape into all the headphones buses.
Alternatively:
(and probably much more sensibly): use the headphones routine outlined in
section 15.2 (g. 15.1).
Wet monitoring16.3
It is customary with live recording to lay tracks dry. (Not so with MIDI setups:
often a tape track is used to record a complex eect. In a MIDI studio a take is
generally MIDI sequencer driven, and hence reproducible should the recorded
eected track eventually prove to be unsuitable, in live recording, a great take
is irreplaceable! Hence the extra caution when laying live tracks.) With dry
recording you will probably want to audition tape tracks with some reverb and/
or echo, to get a better idea of how the nal mix might sound. By pressing the
AUX 3/4/5/6 SOURCE switch (
S 17
), aux buses 3 and 4 are available to the
B-channels, i.e. tape monitoring. You could send to reverb from input channels,
but the FX would disappear on tape playback. Bring the FX back on aux returns
1, 2, 5 or 6. Remember 3 and 4 have been used for headphones patching.
Mixdown16.4
All aux sends and subgroups are now available for mixing, as are
A-channels 23 and 24.
If you have two different instruments recorded onto one track,
the mixdown settings for each might be totally different. Set up two
A-channels. One for each instrument, and switch between them.
The B-channels may be used e.g. as FX returns in place of the normal aux returns
(the advantage being that these channels have PAN and EQ) or as an extra stereo
aux send.