![]() ![]() That's kind of a weird question,, although I understand you're confused, and maybe this is a good source of your confusion. This is pretty important to know for mixing and very powerful, both knowing how to route audio and MIDI and creating templates and presets for everything to speed up your workflow. By using a "track template" you avoid having to repeat this process every time you want to process drums differently, which is - every time. I have a template for TAL-Drum that I use which consists of a folder I call simply "Drums" then I make an instrument track within it with TAL-Drum and as many additional tracks for different drums - "Kick", "Snare", "Toms", "Hihats" that I need. It is especially important for drum-machines since it is advisable to have different compression and the amount of FX on all the different drums. You probably have Battery or TAL-Drum, Speedrum, D16 Nepheton or Drumazon, Kontakt? You can route all the outputs to different channels/tracks with these, so they can be processed differently. You can start by putting some multi-channel instrument on a track and then try to route different channels to different tracks. Reaper's routing is incredibly flexible and it makes it possible to do just about anything. I have a great need for that since it's advisable to process quite a good number of channels in mono don't want to use dual-mono as it screws up the volume if you have the pan law set at anything else then 0. Then some plugins use 50% less CPU because they work in mono. Click to expand.Also, if you want true mono tracks, not dual-mono, you can use 1>1.
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