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multitracking

[ muhl-tee-trak-ing, muhl-tahy- ]

noun

  1. the process of recording separate audio tracks for later mixing into a single audio track.


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Word History and Origins

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Example Sentences

Multitracking her voice to create a mini-choir of Björks during “Mycelia,” she builds a nonverbal a cappella collage to evoke the subterranean fungi network that the song is named after — an ode to hidden connection, or maybe even a eulogy for underground culture in a digital space that only offers otherground.

When the 21st-century folk-primitive guitarist Marisa Anderson — no stranger to electric instruments, home recording or multitracking — learned about George Floyd’s death in May 2020, she spent the day recording ‘The Fire This Time’ and quickly put it on Bandcamp for a month as a benefit single.

Ackamoor’s brother, who lived in San Francisco, helped fund the LP and put the band in a studio with better facilities and multitracking equipment.

But almost immediately, the chord progression starts to wander; then her vocals warp by multitracking and shifting pitch, and soon a breathy trumpet drifts in from the jazz realm; by the time the track ends, it has become a loop of electronic aftereffects.

This call and response is repeated in "Wholy Holy," with Gaye utilizing a multitracking technique to layer two versions of his own vocals:

From Salon

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