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Yep, and for even more control, run your mic into channel 1, your guitar into channel 2, put the RC-20 in the mixer's aux send, and run the output of the looper back into channel 3. Then with the aux send control on each channel strip, you can control how much of the voice or guitar goes to the looper. You'll have a fader for voice, one for guitar and one for the loop, and you'll be sending the house a pre-mixed line out. Just be careful not to turn up channel 3's aux send, or you'll get a feedback loop (or actually, very, very carefully experiment with that feedback loop, they can be fun!) If your mixer has more than one aux send, you can do the same thing with another effect, and even specify how much of one aux goes to the other aux. -t- --- Aptrev@aol.com wrote: > > In a message dated 11/23/04 11:15:19 AM, > eofrane@youngjudaea.org writes: > > << the only way to control the levels of the guitar > and mike separately is > through the looping station on stage, and the sound > guy off stage must treat the > guitar and mike levels as one. >> > > Hi > > If I get your situation, I think I would pass the > mic and guitar thru a small > preamp mixer like the Eurorack mx602 (cheap!) before > the RC20 then you can > adjust the input of either signal. > > The Howie Day rig posted recently might give you > some ideas: > > http://www.hdaee.f2s.com/v2/rig.htm > > He uses 2 looping paths, one for voice and one for > guitar. > > BobC > > > http://www.cdbaby.com/rpcollier > http://trundlebox.iuma.com > http://tinyurl.com/yuru7 > > __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? The all-new My Yahoo! - Get yours free! http://my.yahoo.com