CHAPTER 13. ROUTING AND I/O
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13.6.2
Making Use of Internal Routing
This section presents several internal routing examples in more detail.
Post-Effects Recording
Let's say that you are feeding a guitar into Live, building up a song track by track, overlaying
take onto take. It is certainly powerful to have a separate effects chain per track for applying
different effects to different takes after the fact. You might, however, want to run the guitar
signal through effects (a noise gate or an amp model, for instance)
before
the recording
stage, and record the post-effects signal.
An Example Setup for
Post-Effects Recording.
This is easily accomplished by devoting a special audio track for processing and monitoring
the incoming guitar signal. We call this track Guitar and drag the desired effects into its
device chain. We do not record directly into the Guitar track; instead we create a couple
more tracks to use for recording. Those tracks are all set up to receive their input Post FX
from the Guitar track. Note that we could also tap the Guitar track Post Mixer if we wished
to record any level or panning from it.
As for monitoring, we set the Guitar track's Monitor radio button to In, because we always
want to listen to our guitar through this track, no matter what else is going on in Live. The
other tracks' Monitor radio buttons are set to Off.