Jeremy Nicoll <jn.ml.dbn...@letterboxes.org> writes: > On Thu, 8 Mar 2018, at 14:17, Rodolfo Medina wrote: > >> What I want now, and for what I started the present thread, is, as I said, >> to keep those three channels separated and listen to them through three >> different loudspeakers. Thanks to the kind help from you listers, I >> understand that I need one of those multichannel sound cards... > > It's not normal to do that.... I mean I understand why you want to, I > think. But consider: if someone records an orchestra on - say - 96 > channels... they don't have 96 loudspeakers to listen to each of the > inputs at the same time. > > Instead, a mixing desk would allow you to listen to any individual > channel through your studio loudspeakers ('monitors'). A decent > mixing desk usually offers, for each channel, something called PFL > (Pre Fade Listen) which lets you hear the signal on that channel > even if the fader on the channel is not turned up (so you can check > the channel is working alright before bringing it into a mix). There's > also 'Solo' which when the button is pressed would let you hear one > channel instead of the whole mix, often/usually 'in place' which > means in its position in the stereo mix. So if that channel was panned > all the way to the left, when you Solo it you'd hear it only in the left > monitor. > > Mixing desks (or equivalent audio software) tend to let you 'group' > channels together. So eg (in an orchestra) you might have multiple > mics on the strings, more on wind instruments etc... and in the mixer > you might choose to group the wind instrument channels together, > so you could listen to all of them as one unit (in stereo), or all the > strings together. > > Mixing desks (or software) don't just produce a single mix of the > source channels. In a theatre or concert hall there might be > several places that some sounds have to be sent to, apart from > an overall stereo recording.
Yes, I understand that what I want to do is not normal and that normally one tends to group and mix together several channels and voices... but I think it would be nice - just to try, as an experiment - to let them be separated when they are just a few voices... Rodolfo