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Manual de usuario Roland, modelo VS-1680

Fabricar: Roland
Tamaño del archivo: 3.66 mb
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Idioma del manual:en
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Resumen del manual


No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the written permission of Roland Corporation U.S. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Your Own CD Music makes our lives so much richer. We love to listen to music on CDs, on TV, on the radio and in movie theaters. We listen to it when we work and when we play, on headphones and in our cars. When we discover something we want to hear again and again, we add it to our collections by purchasing it on a CD. It’s fun to share our favorite music with friends and family. Many of us do more than just listen to music. We make our own music as we sing and play, and write our own songs. Thanks to recent advances in digital technology, we can even record audio CDs of our own music all by ourselves. Computers and all-in-one studio workstations make it possible. In the past, great-sounding recordings could only be made in expensive, professional recording studios. Not anymore. Anyone can record a CD at home—it’s easy, inexpensive and lots of fun. You might want to record a CD for any number of reasons: • You can listen to your own music through your favorite sound system—or anywhere, for that matter. It’s an amazing experience. • You can give your music to friends and family. • You can give personalized mix CDs as gifts. • You can sell CDs of your music at performances or over the Internet. • You can create CDs for singing or playing along with for fun. • You can make reference CDs of music you want to practice or rehearse with other musicians. An Introduction to Recording Your Own CD You Third, you “master” your music. Every complete CD-recording studio has to have the same four basic pieces of equipment. Whether it’s a big commercial studio, a computer-based system or a one-piece studio workstation, it should have a: • recorder • mixer• set of mastering tools • CD burnerEach of these elements allows you to perform one of the operations described on the previous page. Every studio should also have effect processing—we’ll explain this later. Multitrack RecorderWhen you sing or play an instrument, a digital recorder captures the sound you produce. It can then play it back at your command. A recorder may store your performance on a hard disk drive—like the kind you’d find in a computer—on a memory card, on digital tape or on a CD, depending on the recorder the studio has. A multitrack recorder can make multiple recordings and play them back together. Each of these recordings is stored on a “track”—hence the word “multitrack.” What this means is that you could, for example... Studio Gear:Recorder...record a vocal on Track 1... ...and then record another on Track 2. When the multitrack recorder plays them back, they sound like a duet performed at the same time. Every complete CD-recording studio has to have the same four basic pieces of equipment. Whether it’s a big commercial studio, a computer-based system or a one-piece studio workstation, it should have a: • recorder • mixer• set of mastering tools • CD burnerEach of these elements allows you to perform one of the operations described on the previous page. Every studio should also have effect processing—we’ll explain this later. Multitrack RecorderWhen you sing or play an instrument, a digital recorder captures the sound you produce. It can then play it back at your command. A recorder may store your performance on a hard disk drive—like the kind you’d find in a computer—on a memory card, on digital tape or on a CD, depending on the recorder the studio has. A multitrack recorder can make multiple recordings and play them back together. Each of these recordings is stored on a “track”—hence the word “multitrack.” What this means is that you could, for example... Studio Gear:Recorder...record a vocal on Track 1... ...and then record another on Track 2. When the multitrack recorder plays them back, they sound like a duet performed at the same time. You could also record a group of musicians at the same time on different tracks. This would let you individually control each player’s recorded performance during playback, changing its volume or sound if you wish. An Introduction to Recording Your Own CD 5 Studio Gear: Mixer and Mastering Tools Mixer A mixer • • contain a professional-quality Mastering Tool Kit (“MTK”) for this purpose. In some studios, each mastering tool may be a hardware device that performs a specific mastering task. Did You Know... ...that there’s a “CD track marker” at the start of each song on a CD? This special bookmark tells a CD player where the song starts when you press the Next or Previous Song button on the player or when you select a song by number. You can place CD track markers where you want them during mastering. An Introduction to Recording Your Own CD Studio Gear: CD Burner and Effects • • Studio Gear: Types of Effects Frequently Used Effects Here are just a few of the most important effects. Reverb Reverb—short for “reverberation”—is the most commonly u...


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