Oh my gosh, thank you!!! I'm on a deadline for a demo and I'm a singer with constant dry mouth, so there's all sorts of weird squishy sounds in my vocals. This is great and you are concise and simple in your steps. Seriously appreciate this tutorial. :)
This has been one of the most comprehensive tutorial on compression. I love your teaching style - its easy to understand and very well articulated! Thank you.
holyyyyy. this is amazing, it is insane, how powerful logic is.... i used to do it all via fading in and out or re-recording. absolute game changer. thank you so much!
thanks for the video, when I go to edit I get a message that file is locked. I can't find a way to unlock it. Any suggestions how to unlock it? Thanks for your help
Hi, thank you. How do you zoom waveform that big. I use an old mac mini with a typing keyboard. And how do you draw the pencil line? Do you have to hold down something while drawing? Thank you.
Thanks, one question though. You say "you can pinch in and out" to zoom in. I don't understand that one. Would you mind - or someone else - to explain ?
That was so clear and concise. Thanks for not wasting time! I’ve learned a lot from this. A question: I try to do this and it says my track is locked but I can’t find the lock symbol anywhere to unlock it. I’ve flattened the track to pitch correct one note as it’s sung. Would this make a difference? I hope you understand my query.
I find these 'de essers' are more hassle than they're worth ... I don't know if it's just Logic's particular plug-in or something in general with these things .. But it seems like I'd rather just go in and program automation by hand. I just never hear much difference with the de esser. Maybe it's just my ears? I don't know. ...Nice explanation of the process though. 👍🏻
Been working in logic pro x for a few years now, and i wish to give you feedback. Your are verry spesific, basal, directly, and doesent make things difficult. this is one of the best videos I watch. Keep making films like this.
A vocal line I was trying to mix gave me real trouble due to the mouth and breathing sounds, but it sounds soooo much better after applying what I learned from this video. Thank you! 💯 Yes the video is a couple years old, but it's still just as relevant today and nothing important in Logic has changed since then.
This is HUGELY helpful. I’m creating an immersive audiobook of my fiction novel, and I cannot tell you how frustrated I’ve been going through 8 hours of audio and hearing every single smack and pop from my mouth. Before this video, I was trimming and fading to handle this. So much useful info in this one video.
Between 5:00 and 5:15, you re-listen to the section you're editing. Two questions: (1) Do you need to exit from the Editor window to hear the track "normally"? The Editor window disappears when you're doing this. Or is the editor somehow still "active" but you just can't see it? (2) As you're listening, the head keeps looping back 2-3 seconds, so you don' t have to move it manually. How do you do this? I only make voiceover recordings so I know nothing about looping. (I notice that there's a yellow band in the tabs bar above the "ruler," which may have something to do with this. Many thanks for your help. Your explanations are the clearest, most detailed, I've found, and your approach overflows with patience.