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by Anthony Flack_Archive
n.c. wrote:so if a track is recorded in stereo, like one track but i select input1+2/stereo. is that a single stereo track? or do i want to open two tracks, and select input 1 mono on the first and input 2 mono on the second and then pan the tracks? 6 of one, half dozen of the other?Yeah, either will work. Use two mono tracks if you want to pan them differently or otherwise treat them differently. A stereo track behaves just like a mono track but of course with two signals stuck together and panned hard left/right. You can split it if you need to, but for a stereo image (output from a keyboard, stereo samples, XY mics etc) it's usually more convenient to keep them together.You can also have more than two inputs on a track, by clicking the I/O you can patch one track into another track, for instance you could send a stereo track to ANOTHER stereo track on inputs 3/4 (or 5/6 etc). This is what you need to do if you want to set a compressor to side-chain.For example if you want to use a gate to get the kick drum out of your underside snare mic, you could click on the I/O of the kick drum, send the kick drum signal to the underside snare channel on aux input 3, and put a gate on the underside snare channel and tell it to process channel 1 but use channel 3 as the trigger.I also often set up reverb on its own track and just patch other channels into the reverb track. I've never used ReaVerberate, always stuck to the impulse-based one. But I'll give the Apple one a go since it's been recommended. I tend to avoid the Apple plugins to spare any problems when opening the project on a Windows machine.