Basic Logic Pro Questions
Basic Logic Pro Questions Posted on: 07.05.2013 by Alexandra Nerby New to Logic Pro 9 and having been on FL years and years ago, I have a question regarding the beat-making process...just the drums.So I load up an instrument, say the Ultrabeat drum machine, and pick a kick sample I want to play. I adjust some parameters and then go into the piano roll and place the kick where I want (4 on the floor). Ok, so now I want to add so claps. Well I can either add the claps inside the exact same Ultrabeat channel strip, or I can create a new strip and rename it "claps." The latter is what I'd like to do, but my question is, when I do this to add in my claps, I open a new piano roll, I cannot see the kicks I previously created. Visually seeing where the kicks are would make layering a drum track pretty easy as in FL. Is there a way to see where the kicks are while I add in the claps while in another channel strip? | |
Emelina Paglia 10.05.2013 |
Originally Posted by Unique Freak
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Alexandra Nerby 10.05.2013 |
Originally Posted by Unique Freak
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Alexandra Nerby 10.05.2013 |
Originally Posted by thepanache
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Alexandra Nerby 07.05.2013 |
Originally Posted by Unique Freak
I am still confused about the different ways of creating percussion though, so let's say just the kick drum. In this video, you can see the bass is in a waveform display on the arrange window. I am not paying attention to the point of the video, just observing different ways of creating sounds. Why are those bass kicks in a waveform display? Is it just a sample that was dragged into the arrange window and looped? What is the purpose of doing so vs. using Ultrabeat? Thanks! |
Alexandra Nerby 07.05.2013 | New to Logic Pro 9 and having been on FL years and years ago, I have a question regarding the beat-making process...just the drums. So I load up an instrument, say the Ultrabeat drum machine, and pick a kick sample I want to play. I adjust some parameters and then go into the piano roll and place the kick where I want (4 on the floor). Ok, so now I want to add so claps. Well I can either add the claps inside the exact same Ultrabeat channel strip, or I can create a new strip and rename it "claps." The latter is what I'd like to do, but my question is, when I do this to add in my claps, I open a new piano roll, I cannot see the kicks I previously created. Visually seeing where the kicks are would make layering a drum track pretty easy as in FL. Is there a way to see where the kicks are while I add in the claps while in another channel strip? |
Emelina Paglia 10.05.2013 |
Originally Posted by Unique Freak
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Alexandra Nerby 10.05.2013 |
Originally Posted by Unique Freak
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Laurinda Benya 11.05.2013 | Personal preference. Some producers like to use audio instead of midi because it's more raw and allows you to visually see what's going on. |
Alexandra Nerby 10.05.2013 |
Originally Posted by thepanache
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Syreeta Piela 10.05.2013 | You need to understand the difference between Audio and MIDI. Audio is an actual piece of sound such as an MP3 or a WAV file represented by the blue blocks of Audio. MIDI is a signal used to generate a sound within a software instrument, such as ultrabeat. So your DAW will see a MIDI note and the software instrument will generate which ever sound you have selected. And yes you just drag and drop audio files into audio channels. |
Alexandra Nerby 07.05.2013 |
Originally Posted by Unique Freak
I am still confused about the different ways of creating percussion though, so let's say just the kick drum. In this video, you can see the bass is in a waveform display on the arrange window. I am not paying attention to the point of the video, just observing different ways of creating sounds. Why are those bass kicks in a waveform display? Is it just a sample that was dragged into the arrange window and looped? What is the purpose of doing so vs. using Ultrabeat? Thanks! |
Laurinda Benya 07.05.2013 | Don't use the piano roll in the arrange window. Use Ultrabeat's sequencer to lay down your percussion. You can also use "multi-timbral" mode when you load the ultrabeat plug-in into the channel strip. This allows separate control of each percussive element in a channel strip (which helps with eq, pan, automation, fx, etc...). Do a youtube search on how multi-timbral mode works. |
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