</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>
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
+ 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 -∞ 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