</p>
<p>
In this scheme Solo has no effect other than to mute other non-soloed tracks;
- with solo (rather then listen), the monitor out is fed from the master bus.
+ with solo (rather than listen), the monitor out is fed from the master bus.
</p>
<h2>Other solo options</h2>
When using solo-in-place (SiP), in other words when soloed tracks are being
listened to on the master bus, this fader specifies the gain that will be
applied to other tracks in order to mute them. Setting this level to
- -∞ dB will mean that other tracks will not be heard at all; setting to
- some higher value less than 0dB means that other non-soloed tracks will be h
- eard, just reduced in volume compared to the soloed tracks. Using a value
- larger than -∞ dB is sometimes called "Solo-In-Front" by other DAWs, because
+ &minus∞ dB will mean that other tracks will not be heard at all; setting to
+ some higher value less than 0dB means that other non-soloed tracks will be heard, just
+ reduced in volume compared to the soloed tracks. Using a value
+ larger than &minus∞ dB is sometimes called "Solo-In-Front" by other DAWs, because
the listener has the sense that soloed material is "in front" of other
material. In Ardour, this is not a distinct mode, but instead the mute cut
control offers any level of "in-front-ness" that is desired.