Harrison Labs MIXBUS V2.0.2 User Manual

Page 25

Advertising
background image

Basic Editing Concepts

Users familiar with other DAW conventions will quickly adapt to the recording and editing features of Mixbus.

Creating Tracks

Immediately upon opening the editor, you will probably want to create one or more tracks for recording. Use the Add
Track/Bus
to create any number of mono or stereo tracks for your session. Alternatively, you can Import existing
audio from the File menu. Finally, if you find yourself starting the same way with each session, you can create a
session template which will be available as a starting point next time you start a new session. Snapshots conve-
niently save your entire editing/mixing session for later recall. Saving a snapshot is instantaneous and takes up
essentially no extra disk space (snapshots all share the same audio data on disk).

Mixbus uses the right mouse button for many features. Try right-clicking on tracks, regions, mute buttons, solo but-
tons, group panes, regions, selected ranges, markers, mixer redirects, clocks, the region list, and the marker bar
area. Each will launch a context menu that provides many features.

Track Management

On the far left of the edit window, the Editor Mixer is a single mixer channel strip that “follows” the selected track.
The editor mixer can be hidden or shown as needed. To see all of the mixer strips for the tracks and buses on one
window, show the Mixer window. Alt/Opt-M toggles between the Mixer and the Editor windows. Mixer strips have an
Input button for selection of the physical input that feeds the track. For example if you have 8 tracks but only a 2-
input soundcard, you must route the inputs to the tracks as-needed. Another way to manage track inputs and out-

1

13

3..0

0 E

Ed

diit

t W

Wiin

nd

do

ow

w O

Ov

ve

er

rv

viie

ew

w

25

Section 13.0 - Edit Window Overview

Mixbus User Guide

Editor Mixer

Track

Audio Region

Timeline &

Markers Ruler

Transport

Toolbar

Edit Mode &

Grid Options

Editor Sidebar

Note: Unless otherwise noted, "click" means a left-click. Right and middle-click are called out when specified.

%

Advertising