The fading in of one sound while fading out another. At some point the sounds cross at an equal volume.
This is a form of 'gap removed' 'gapless', that uses points within the two sets of audio to determine a suitable 'splice' point, and employs cross-fading of the 'outro' (the part of the outgoing track which is determined as the cutoff point for the outgoing audio) and 'intro' (the point in the next track where it's determined as being the point to start from within the track) points and using effective artificial fade-in and fade-out to smooth the joining together. A crude form of this was employed in the iMP CD units, and a more advanced version is employed in the RB firmware for H100/iHP-1xx series players.
This is where two shots are mixed dissolving one shot into another.
A smooth segue between two sounds.
A procedure in which one independent channel of information is raised as the other is lowered so that one smoothly replaces the other e.g. one audio track may 'crossfade' to another.
A lighting action in which a particular light cue fades down as the next light cue fades up.
A method of smoothly moving from one video clip or photo to another. With a crossfade transition, the frames in the playing clip fade out as the frames in the new clip fade in. In the film industry, the same process is called a dissolve. decrypt To convert encrypted content back into its original form. See also: encrypt
to fade out one source (usually audio) and fade up another at the same time as a kind of transition. In video it’s called a dissolve.
The technique where a DJ, producer or engineer fades out the out going track at the same time as fading in the new track.
Within the audio industry, a term most often associated with dj mixers. DJ mixers usually feature a crossfader slide-type potentiometer control. This control allows the dj to transition from one stereo program source (located at one travel extreme) to another stereo program source (located at the other travel extreme). The goal in crossfader design is to maintain equal loudness (power) in the system during transition. Contrast with pan and balance controls.