![]() Ĭoming to practical advise: try to approach things the Logic way put aside the way you where doing things on Cubase, and find the most natural ways to do those things in Logic then re-evaluate both ways and chose the best. With respect to modern editors is far from intuitive, and complex, but is hugely powerful, expecially considering emacs-lisp but if you use it every day, 8 hour a day, complexity is no more a problem i have emacs keybindings in my fingers firmware. For IT guys, i'll make an exemple i use emacs 8 hours a day, and i have been using emacs like that for around 35 years. I am not a professional user, i am not even a daily user coming back to Cubase after a couple of weeks or more was always a pain : the power of Cubase it show up in front of your face as complexity also in many ways the UI was not completely Mac-Like, you don't zoom with a pinch gesture etc for exemple, in how many places and different ways can you edit a track equalisation ? I counted 5, but i am not sure.Īgain this is not bad or good for a professional, using Cubase every day, having choices is important it allows to develop your specific workflow and optimise your way or working.īut, and this is very personal, i find Logic more intuitive, linear, not using it every day. Not that Logic is better than Cubase, but a number of things make me more at home. I have been a Pro24 user on the atari, and followed the whole Cubase history up to Cubase 10.5, but i al very happy for the switch. I am a composer, using VIs and recording only hardware MIDI instruments. I switched from Cubase to Logic last year the original reason was money (avoid the yearly update cost) and the dongle, because moving to a portable set up (i think this specific problem was solved in Cubase 11, i am not sure. Really handy if you have several old projects with half baked ideas that could fit well with your current project. Remember to scroll to the right when selecting the tick boxes as automation, I/O etc are there. You can then select any track, it's plugin, automation and import it in. You then get a browser within Logic to every track, tempo, notes etc of that project. You can pick an existing project from the next window. I use it often for non template stuff like synths that have a strew of fx added.Īnother good one is File - Import - Logic projects. Next time you add a track, click the top icon (will be called Settings now) and you'll see that folder in the list with the preset. If you often create new tracks that have the same instrument, fx & eq etc every time, then once done, click the top icon with the instruments name, choose 'Save Channel Strip Setting As.' ![]() Some other tips maybe, don't want to teach you to suck eggs either: ![]() And I agree with above, the babylonwaves are great and a huge time saver. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |