I don't expect you all to help me much until I've done a thorough read on this topic, and frankly, that's fair. I'll come back when I have red and need things more clarified, but can someone show me on my Pro tools DVD where in the documentation I need to go to read up on what an auxiliary track is? I'm just not getting the whole concept of a aux, a send, receive, and a bus is?

I kind a get it, but not really. Here's what I'd say in my own words. Maybe you all can help me. If I want help here, I need to not just say I think I get something a move on. How can you all help me, if I don't at least work with you all and try!?

So, my understanding, with that in mind, of an aux track or is that my first misatke right there, it's not a track, it's a send? Anyway, is, it's used for routing certain tracks, be them audio, or midi through another empty track which is specifically used more for global processwing? So like, if I had say, a music track, then I had 3 singers that came in my studio to dubb their vocals... Rather than taking say, both the females, and processing them the same exact way on various inserts individually, I could route them through an AUX track, then go down to that AUX track and on insert A, I may add some say... oh... I dono, let's just for sake, sake compression dynamics. Now, because they are both routed to that AUX track, the effects now are gonna be applied to both the female tracks at the same time.

Am I getting this correctly, or, honestly, no? Not exactly.

You're looking at me I'm sure saying, no, not even close. Chris, you need to go read. I know I do! I'm willing! Just please tell me what file to bring up, and how within that file to search and find the section I need to read.

I'll be using Preview within Snow Leopard to access the pdf files.

Thank you.

Chris.

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