dubdown
English
editEtymology
editNoun
editdubdown (countable and uncountable, plural dubdowns)
- (music) The process of remixing audio tracks to use fewer tracks.
- 1971, Exclusively Yours - Volume 24, page 59:
- In this application, the loudspeaker monitor is the standard by which recordings are judged—from initial microphone placement, through mixing and dubdown, to final mastering.
- 1983, International Television:
- Full bandwidth digitally recorded images don't pick up random analog noise during dubdown, but they can add "quantizing noise" (detectable rings separating areas of different luminance intensities).
- (music) The result of a dubdown.
- 1980, Milton Lustig, Music editing for motion pictures, page 78:
- You certainly should have the final dubdowns of your playbacks from the sixteen track to the three-stripe 35mm.
- 2012, Todd Van Buskirk, Purple Chick, →ISBN, page 272:
- It's true that “Barnyard” only exists as a poor second generation copy, a dubdown to mono recorded onto one track of an otherwise blank 8-track/one inch tape.