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The final combination of tracks onto one composite sound track synchronous with the picture is variously known as mixing, rerecording, or dubbing. Mixing takes place at a special console equipped with separate controls for each track to adjust loudness and various aspects of sound quality. Although some of the new digital processes employ the record-industry technique of overdubbing, or building sound track-by-track onto a single tape, most mixing in films is still performed by the traditional practice of threading multiple dubbing units (sprocketed magnetic film containing separate music, dialogue, and sound effects elements) on banks of interlocked dubbers. The playback ...(100 of 19892 words)