But having worked in Studio One and Cubase, I noticed they deliberately separate the concepts:
- Folder tracks - let you group several tracks visually, to have them in one place & fold them out of view when not editing them; but each track is still - by default - routed to Master
- Bus tracks - that actually capture the output of several tracks for common processing, before passing it on to Master for final summing
Initially I couldn't really see the use for that and honestly found it confusing, but lately I forced myself to use buses & folders as they are - I think - meant to be used, i.e. folder tracks group stuff that I'll likely want to reference and edit together, and bus tracks for stuff that sounds or is meant to sound similar.
So for example I'd have folders for:
- drums (kick, percussions),
- bass (low- and mid-range),
- melodics (acid lines, synths), and
- fx/atmospheres (pads, sound FX),
- kick + low-end bass,
- mid-range bass + acid lines,
- synths + pads,
- percussions + sound FX
How you are using those features of your DAW?