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  2. Stem (audio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stem_(audio)

    In audio production, a stem is a discrete or grouped collection of audio sources mixed together, usually by one person, to be dealt with downstream as one unit. A single stem may be delivered in mono, stereo, or in multiple tracks for surround sound. [1] The beginnings of the process can be found in the production of early non-silent films.

  3. Audio mixing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_mixing

    Live sound mixing is the process of electrically blending together multiple sound sources at a live event using a mixing console. Sounds used include those from instruments, voices, and pre-recorded material. Individual sources may be equalised and routed to effect processors to ultimately be amplified and reproduced via loudspeakers. [3]

  4. Audio mixing (recorded music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_mixing_(recorded_music)

    In sound recording and reproduction, audio mixing is the process of optimizing and combining multitrack recordings into a final mono, stereo or surround sound product. In the process of combining the separate tracks, their relative levels are adjusted and balanced and various processes such as equalization and compression are commonly applied ...

  5. Gapless playback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gapless_playback

    Gapless playback is the uninterrupted playback of consecutive audio tracks, such that relative time distances in the original audio source are preserved over track boundaries on playback. For this to be useful, other artifacts (than timing-related ones) at track boundaries should not be severed either.

  6. Multitrack recording - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multitrack_recording

    Mixing desk with twenty inputs and eight outputs. Multitracking can be achieved with analogue recording, tape-based equipment (from simple, late-1970s cassette-based four-track Portastudios, to eight-track cassette machines, to 2" reel-to-reel 24-track machines), digital equipment that relies on tape storage of recorded digital data (such as ADAT eight-track machines) and hard disk-based ...

  7. Audio Video Interleave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_Video_Interleave

    AVI files can contain both audio and video data in a file container that allows synchronous audio-with-video playback. Like the DVD video format, AVI files support multiple streaming audio and video, although these features are seldom used. Many AVI files use the file format extensions developed by the Matrox OpenDML group in February 1996. [5]