
If you are looking for Mixer Sound then you are in the right place.
You can also use the search box to the right to find more Mixer Sound.
Will using a audio mixer increase sound quality?
I have a Lexicon Lambda interface Mixer Sound and im not sure if buying a mixer would be smart. Will using a mixer increase my sound quality? Am I able to use it with the lambda or will I fry something?
Powered by Yahoo! Answers









































connect the cd player to the input line of the mixer and the output line of the mixer in the input of the surround sound receiver/speaker depending which one it is
Try doing it LEGALLY by visiting a freeware site. Filehippo is a good place to start, also try Tucows.
It’s Kyle Dunnigan. Funny guy.
I would recommend you Behringer Xenyx 802 Premium 8-Input 2-Bus Mixer with Xenyx Mic Preamps and British EQs @Premium ultra low-noise, high headroom analog mixer@2 state-of-the-art XENYX Mic Preamps comparable to standalone boutique preamps@Neo-classic ”British” 3-band EQs for warm and musical sound@1 post fader FX send per channel for external FX devices@1 stereo aux return for FX applications or as separate stereo inputhttp://www.amazon.com/Behringer-802-Premium-8-Input-Preamps/dp/B000J5XS3C/?tag=top-gamer-20Buy it Ebay :http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?ff3=4&pub=5574865779&toolid=10001&campid=5336686963&customid=gaming+best+deal&mpre=http%3A%2F%2Fshop.ebay.com%2Fi.html%3F_nkw%3Dipod%2Btouch%2B%26_sacat%3D0%26_odkw%3Dkindle%26_osacat%3D0%26_trksid%3Dp3286.c0.m270.l1313
Try thishttp://www.easytipsandtricks.com/browse/buying-new-laptop
Looks like two questions to me.Let’s start with the second one so that the answer to the first one makes more sense.For sound routing, ignore the playlist for now. Just know that the sounds come from the channels (F6) and by default, are routed to the main out of the mixer (F9). Select the channel (literally highlight the button in the channel window, F6) that is making the sound you want to adjust. Now open the mixer (F9) and right-click on any mixer track that is not connected to anything (i.e. – Insert 14) and select “Link selected channels>to this track”. Now the instrument, audio clip, or whatever is making the sound in that channel is routed to that mixer track. The output of that track is automatically sent to the main out so you will still hear it, but now you can control that sound.This allows me to answer the first question more clearly, because after linking this sound (like in our example above), just use the panning knob on the mixer track. It’s the round one above the volume control and every track has it’s own. Try adding the Fruity Stereo Shaper to a track (the 8 effects rows to the right of the mixer) for interesting panning and widening abilities too.Cheers
Have you tried reinstalling the drivers by way of the Device Manager?
I think you might need to type this again and put it in the software section. This is in the dog selection
hey well first just keep on doing wat u love doing 2 if u want to become a soun mixter for beats and movies u can try this program i use for raping its called fruityloops studio its verry goood and thats wer i mix all my beats have fun
Mike – This is a common problem. It is caused by a “ground loop” between your laptop and the mixer. There is no free way to fix this assuming your cable is good.One way to fix this is to buy a simple “direct box”. The direct box has a transformer that will eliminate the ground loop. All you do is connect the headphone end of your cable to the laptop as usual and then connect the other end (1/4 inch) to the direct box. The direct box connects to the mixer with a standard 3 pin XLR mic cable.Direct box:http://www.zzounds.com/item–WHREDB1Cable (if needed) to connect the laptop to direct box:http://www.zzounds.com/item–HOSCMP15When I connect the audio out from a laptop to any sound system, I always use a direct box.
you sit at a board, which all of the instruments and speakers and mics and shiit are plugged into. You listen to the band, and decide how loud each individual part is going to be. Are the vocals too loud? You will ask yourself. Does that guitar sound good?This will mainly all happen at the “sound check” before the show… Thats why they do the “check check” thing on the microphone and the musicians tool around a bit, they play songs, etc. — to get a feel for the sound of the venue. —if you are a studio sound mixer, its basically the same thing, but you are doing it for recordings.
Well, there are several ways to go with this… first of all, are you going the computer-direction, or the stand-alone workstation-direction? Either one works, but presents different products. For computers, I highly recommend this interface: http://www.fullcompass.com/product/332361.htmlFor Pro Tools: http://www.zzounds.com/item–DGDMX003RStandalone: http://www.samsontech.com/products/productpage.cfm?prodID=1919I have personally used all of these, and they are all really fantastic. Especially the HD16, which is perfect for a small, lower-budget project studio. The MOTU interface is a little higher speed, and then the 003 is pretty high end. But, if you want the best, you’ll pony up for it. Also, make sure your mics are up to par as well… an interface will only sound as good as the mics you put in it (and vice versa).Have fun, and good luck!
Audacity might be able to do that…but why not just record them separately and then mix them? I mean, if it’s already on your pc you can just do a multitrack and put your voice on top of the music so they’ll play at the same time. I definitely would not suggest trying to record both at the same time.
You can try Guitar Center or Sam Ash – both are major music/pro-audio equipment retailers, but your best bet might be e-bay.
what you are looking for is a fully duplex usb sound card. the duplex means it can both record and save back at the same time. It would be unusual for a sound card to have dual headphones but this isnt really an issue as could out put the headphone out to a small headphone amp if you want multiple headphones in say a recording environment. If you have a firewire port this would be a better option to usb as usb usually only allows 2 channels to be recorded at once. Not a problem for small projects, but useless when it comes to drums. some good examples in the usb rages with what you are looking for are the EMU MU4 XL which has for ins and outs and the usual emu quality and is extremly resonably pricedhttp://www.musicstore.de/is-bin/INTERSHOP.enfinity/WFS/MusicStore-MusicStoreShop-Site/en_EN/-/EUR/ViewProductDetail-Start;pgid=TOZgS8fSZObR0000000000000000C0RyEPLJ?CatalogVideo=&ProductUUID=NkPVqHzm8YQAAAEYO68ah9Xw&CatalogCategoryID=0b_VqHzlPdgAAAEVPxxWf70R&JumpTo=OfferListor the lexicon alpha which i believe has a better vocal soundhttp://www.musicstore.de/is-bin/INTERSHOP.enfinity/WFS/MusicStore-MusicStoreShop-Site/en_EN/-/EUR/ViewProductDetail-Start;pgid=TOZgS8fSZObR0000000000000000C0RyEPLJ?CatalogVideo=&ProductUUID=HifVqHzmaT0AAAEXmTVgyFi7&CatalogCategoryID=0b_VqHzlPdgAAAEVPxxWf70R&JumpTo=OfferListfire wire starts at litlle more expensive but can be well worth it . ive just spalshed out on a alesis multimix 16 http://www.musicstore.de/is-bin/INTERSHOP.enfinity/WFS/MusicStore-MusicStoreShop-Site/en_EN/-/EUR/ViewProductDetail-Start;pgid=?SKU=REC0004041-000&ProductUUID=0&JumpTo=OfferListand it rocks!!
Sorry, you’re out of luck… If someone can’t sing, then a mixer can’t fix that. A quality mixer (with high quality preamplifiers and EQ), plus a good recording room, a top notch microphone, great reverb and a touch of high class compression – all expensive stuff – can bring out the best in a good sounding voice. Mind you, you will also need an experienced sound engineer to work this stuff. Apart from that, you simply can not polish a turd. What is more, a low cost mixer will always only degrade any signal, never improve it.You do have software or hardware solutions called auto-tune which can be used to correct notes or phrases which is out of tune. However, contrary to what many tend to believe, it can not make a singer sound good. You need to be able to sing and have a good voice to sound good…
sounds like you need an amp. If your speakers are passive (only plug in a speaker cable) then you would need an amp.If your speakers are active (plug speaker and a power cable) then you don’t.
yea that other person you talk to, should check his/her sound cards, and you should ask that one to see, if he can hear the sounds from other websites, or music files or not. If he can, then he can try to delete the yahoo msger, and then re-install it. Otherwise, its the problem with his sound card, or speakers.hope that helps!
You need an amp = http://www.americanmusical.comCome ot of the outs of the mixer in to the amp 1/4 jacks and out of the amp outs in to the 1/4″ phone jack inputs for connection to the speakers .
There are many ways to do it. The simplest way is to just get some recording software on a nearby computer (maybe “audacity” at soundforge.net). Then just cable the aux out on the board to the line in on the computer soundcard (blue connector). The sound card converts the analog to digital – no need to worry about that part.Both PC or Mac will do the job. If the rest of the church building has PC’s, it might be good to go with that. If the computer is on the church LAN, the file transfer will be easy.What we do at my church is record straight to a CD recorder for the CD ministry and also straight to a laptop for Mp3 files. E-mail me if you have other questions.God bless you!