Work with channel strips in edit mode, Channel strips overview, 45 work with channel strips in edit mode 45 – Apple MainStage 3 User Manual

Page 45

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Chapter 5

Work in Edit mode

45

Work with channel strips in Edit mode

Channel strips overview

Channel strips are the building blocks of your patches. They contain the instruments and effects
for the sounds you use in performance. MainStage channel strips use the channel strip interface
common to many DAW and mixing applications. The main features of MainStage channel strips
are shown below:

Expression control
Settings menu
Channel EQ

Input slot
Effect slots
Send slots and Send

Level knob
Output slot
Pan knob

Volume fader

Mute and Solo buttons

MIDI plug-in slot

Icon: Shows the type of channel strip for easy identification.

Expression control: Allows you to quickly adjust the expression value of the channel strip.

Settings menu: Allows you to load and save the entire routing configuration of a single channel
strip, including all loaded plug-ins and settings.

Channel EQ: Allows you to add an EQ effect to sculpt the sound of the channel strip signal
before applying other effects.

MIDI plug-in slots: Allow you to insert MIDI plug-ins into instrument channel strips.

Effect slots: Allow you to insert plug-ins into audio, instrument, aux, and output channel strips.

Send slots: Allow you to route a channel strip’s signal to an aux channel strip. Sends are
commonly used to apply the same effect or effects to several signals.

Send level knob: Controls the amount of signal sent to an aux channel strip. This knob appears
when a Send slot is activated.

Effect slot: Sets the channel strip’s input source. Depending on the channel strip type, it can
be a physical input, a bus, or a software instrument plug-in—in this case it is known as an
Instrument slot.

Output slot: Sets the channel strip’s output path. It can be a physical output or a bus.

Pan/Balance knob: On a mono channel strip, the Pan/Balance knob controls the position of the
signal in the stereo image. On a stereo channel strip, it controls the relative level of the left and
right signals at their outputs.

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