![]() ![]() Here we resent their signal to a mixer track (send) called “ALL DRUMS”. Route all the drum tracks to a single channel. You have a drum beat with each of the drum sounds having its own mixer track. Now that you learned how to create sends, here is an example of everyday use: Video tutorial: How to Create and Use Sends After this, you’ll have to apply everything you learned from this video tutorial in an example involving drums. Watch the video to understand the whole thing about sends. Going further, the signal cumulated into a send can be directed or diverted to another send, and so on, which means the possibilities are endless. If you are more of a button person, simply click the mixer icon on the tool bar at the top of the screen. This will hide and show the mixer from its last location on the screen. The easiest way to access the mixer is by pressing the shortcut F9. But what’s cool, is that you have full control of each of both mixer tracks, for example, you can bypass the original sound and leave only the processed sound from the send, or adjust the amount of signal the master receives from the mixer tracks etc. Here are two simple ways to access the mixer inside FL Studio. When you route signal from a mixer track to another mixer track/send, the master will receive audio data from both sources. In a brief explanation, the chain is simple: a mixer track receives audio data from a plugin or audio clip, then all the signal goes to master. See also: FL Studio Tutorial – Sidechain Compression with Fruity Limiter ![]()
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