The distortion/saturation question is probably worthy of a thread unto itself. Especially because there are so many ways to gainstage sound levels on all the Elektrons I’ve encountered. I’ve never had the OT’s inputs distort (as long as I’m reasonable) or bleed on me personally, but I tend to run only other Elektrons through her as stereo pairs, so maybe that keeps me out of trouble.
… Anyway, I think part of the reason I wanted to kick the original question around is because of a line I remember from somewhere in the OT manual: “Depending on the complexity of your setup you may not even need a separate mixer”, or something to that effect. Elektron manuals being notoriously terse, a suggestive line like that caught my ear. I figured it meant, you can set up the OT to do what a mixer otherwise would – along with the filtering, EQing, etc. each channel would permit.
I’d like to be able to walk into a club with the small setup the OT manual implies, plug into two channels from my OT’s master outs, and from that point onward deal with everything from my own hardware controls.
That’s basically what I do now. And I’d like to think it’s worth spending a lot of time trying to get substantially better at it.
But I don’t know mixers nearly as well as I should, and wonder if I’d be expecting too much from a multifunctional sampler that doesn’t have a dedicated mixer’s focus.