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The combination of a top control surface, excellent build quality and generous audio connectivity make ProjectMix I/O a very sweet proposition.
The MusicRadar Team, Tue 23 Oct 2007, 12:04 pm BST
For a start, you get eight analogue inputs that can all be used simultaneously. Each one can be switched between an XLR balanced microphone connector and a 1/4" TRS balanced line input socket – you can leave both plugged in at the same time if you wish.
Each input has a gain control plus clear and bright LEDs for ‘Signal’ and ‘Clip’. Phantom power is available on all the microphone inputs.
Input 1 has an additional button that enables/disables the high-impedance guitar jack socket on the front edge of the unit. If you want to record more than one guitar at once, you’ll have to get a DI box or a preamp. There are four analogue outputs with plenty of gain. These are balanced and perfect for use with active monitor speakers.
Two 1/4" headphone outputs on the front edge get their signals from outputs 1 and 2, though a button enables one of them to receive outputs 3 and 4 instead (if you need a different monitor mix, for example).
You’ve also got independent digital connectivity in the form of S/PDIF I/O on both coaxial and optical sockets – the latter being switchable so that it can provide eight channels of ADAT I/O instead. You can’t use ADAT and S/PDIF at the same time, despite the presence of the coaxial connector.
So, there are 16 simultaneous inputs in total (eight of them analogue) and 12 simultaneous outputs (only four of them analogue). As such, you could only use ProjectMix I/O for surround mixing if you could find some way of harnessing those digital outputs.
Control
Of course, ProjectMix I/O is more than just an audio interface – it’s also a hardware control surface. It’s designed both for controlling the main mixing and transport functions of your audio software and virtual instruments/ effects, and other assigned functions in your host environment.
The unit features nine touch-sensitive, 100mm motorised faders (eight for the mixer input channels, one for the master channel). Unless they happen to be jumping to a new position, the motors make no more mechanical noise than when you move the faders by hand.
As we expected, ProjectMix I/O’s main mode of operation is as an emulation of the Mackie Control (this is the most common standard for control surfaces). This emulation comes in selectable, slightly modified versions that are optimised for Pro Tools M-Powered 7, Ableton Live 5, Apple Logic, Steinberg Cubase SX, MOTU Digital Performer and Cakewalk Sonar. Although the unit operates with any software that supports the Mackie Control, it has fewer buttons and these have different assignments, so it may not provide all the functions you need.
Testing
We tested ProjectMix I/O with both Cubase SX 3 and Ableton Live 5, and it was a delight to use in both cases. In fact, the unit works far better than expected in Live; this is due to the fact that the navigation keys and scroll wheel – in conjunction with the Zoom and Scrub buttons – can be used to trigger either individual clips or entire scenes.
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Does its job perfectly. Built to last. Excellent audio quality. Bright and clear indicator panels. Optimised for the leading DAW software.
Only available in a bundle with Ableton Live. Slightly inadequate scroll wheel.
An excellent all-round interface. However, bundling it with Live and raising the price is a mistake.
All MusicRadar's reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.






ProjectMix I/0