Recording Techniques Crosssword

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Across 5. - A recording technique. An effect where two identical recorded sounds (copies of the same signal) are mixed with the second signal delayed slightly, to produce a “swooshing” effect.

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Transcript of Recording Techniques Crosssword

Page 1: Recording Techniques Crosssword

Across5. - A recording technique. An effect where two identical recorded sounds (copies of the same signal) are mixed with the second signal delayed slightly, to produce a “swooshing” effect.6. - A recording term which refers to the over-loading of the sound. Often heard on the guitar7. - Any sound source is connected to an individual track, and through a channel on a mixing desk. All tracks build together to make a final multi-track mix.

Page 2: Recording Techniques Crosssword

Down1. - This is a multi-track recording technique. While listening on headphones to the playback of previously recorded track(s), new tracks are recorded simultaneously over (or on top of) those tracks.

2. - Controlling the placement of individual recorded sounds in the left or right of the stereo field by means of a pan pot on the mixer3. - Recording the same instrument twice for simultaneous playback. If you record two guitars performing the same thing, for example, it sounds fuller or has a richer texture compared to a single guitar.4 - A recording technique that allows you to combine several tracks together and record them onto another track. This frees up space and is particularly useful if you are working with a limited number of tracks for recording.