A mixer.
A Musical Mix-Up - 1915 was released on: USA: 15 December 1915
There is drums and somemore
The cast of A Musical Mix-Up - 1915 includes: Edward Boulden as Edward Pickett Dorothy Graham as Ella Lee
the device is a Pug Mill
There is drums and somemore
You first make your basic tracks, bass, drums. Then you overdubb guitar, vocals, and whatever extra instruments are involved in the song. When you have a good recording of those sounds, it's time to mix down to a version where the tracks are together, on to two tracks, left and right. Your levels are meticulously monitored, so the blend is balanced, where all the instruments can be heard, and at the level you want. Then you mix down. If your result is acceptable, you keep it. If you don't think it's quite as good as you planned, you can re-mix it. It may become more involved, but that's a general picture of what mixing is.
The UX2 includes Ableton Live Lite 6 Studio Edition. It can record and mix tracks for you, however, most users upgrade from this bundled recording software to a more professional package if they want to get serious. The UX2 has 2 inputs, so it can record 2 instruments or 2 microphones at the same time. If you need to record a whole band at once, you'll need a hardware mixer to mix all the audio down to a 2-channel (stereo) mix.
A mix engineer has a pretty cool job. They mix different beats, vocals and instruments and turn them into songs. You can get a degree in it, but you learn the most while actually doing the job.
You mix a song by controlling the volumes of the tracks. How you do this depends upon what you used to record the song.
A combination of how instruments are recorded with microphones and any treatment or effects help isolate instruments in a mix. If you have two instruments in the same bass range - such as a kick drum and bass guitar - EQ or equalization can help separate the instruments. You can dial down or bring up frequencies that conflict. You can also pan instruments left or right to various degrees. There are other detailed ways to get more clarity out of instruments in a mix, but those two are the basic, most obvious things to try.
You should NEVER mix different types of batteries in any device. The charging characteristics are different and one type will charge "harder" than the other.
Some common instruments used in German music include the accordion, clarinet, tuba, and alpine horn. Traditional German music tends to feature a mix of brass, woodwind, and folk instruments.