Awesome video mate! Maybe you can grace us with a mix from scratch vid for a song like this? Really like the sound of your mixes and would like to see your process if at all possible.
If I want to change the tempo of a song multiple times, for example, from BPM100 to BPM110, and then to BPM120, Logic will generate new audio each time I change the tempo, instead of changing the tempo based on the original audio. So I have to undo the tempo each time to get better sound quality. Because the sound quality will become very poor after multiple tempo changes.If it is a finished song, it may be convenient, but it is troublesome to do this for a song in production
I think you can actually do it that way too if you only have a 2 track. But as you can see in the vid, he used different quantization algos for different sources to minimize artifacts.
Thanks John. Edward beat me to it, doing the change to the individual tracks creates way less warble and artifacts than if you do it to the mix as a whole. But doing it like this might also be good if you’re half way into tracking a song and realize the tempo isn’t working, you could adjust the sounds you’ve tracked so far to the new tempo and then keep tracking the rest of the song in the new tempo. You can also do it to individual sections, speed up on the chorus etc
@@spinlightstudios "like hell informal 1.) very much (used for emphasis): my head hurts like hell. 2.) used in ironic expressions of scorn or disagreement: like hell I'm telling a stranger my address and phone number."
Awesome video mate! Maybe you can grace us with a mix from scratch vid for a song like this? Really like the sound of your mixes and would like to see your process if at all possible.
Thanks mate! I’ll have a think about how I would approach a full mix video. Would be a big task haha!
If I want to change the tempo of a song multiple times, for example, from BPM100 to BPM110, and then to BPM120, Logic will generate new audio each time I change the tempo, instead of changing the tempo based on the original audio. So I have to undo the tempo each time to get better sound quality. Because the sound quality will become very poor after multiple tempo changes.If it is a finished song, it may be convenient, but it is troublesome to do this for a song in production
You rock big time . THANK YOU!!
Cheers Paul!
Thanks man!
No problem!
Thanks! I enjoyed that.
But if your final change to the mix is merely a tempo change, why not simply do it to the 2-track mix?
I think you can actually do it that way too if you only have a 2 track. But as you can see in the vid, he used different quantization algos for different sources to minimize artifacts.
Thanks John. Edward beat me to it, doing the change to the individual tracks creates way less warble and artifacts than if you do it to the mix as a whole. But doing it like this might also be good if you’re half way into tracking a song and realize the tempo isn’t working, you could adjust the sounds you’ve tracked so far to the new tempo and then keep tracking the rest of the song in the new tempo. You can also do it to individual sections, speed up on the chorus etc
Thank you so much!
Glad I could help!
Great funny video! 😂 I use Cubase, but it's simple in Logic. Thanks!
Haha thanks man! Cubase is pretty good 👍🏻
thinking that "but lord i can sing like hell" is the opposite of what they wanted to say.
Kinda harsh?
@@spinlightstudios Yes, the lyricist/singer is very harsh on himself - for he sings very well!
@@lemonderangello I think he means he can sing like Hell in a good way.. like when people say “hell yeah!” Haha
@@spinlightstudios "like hell informal
1.) very much (used for emphasis): my head hurts like hell.
2.) used in ironic expressions of scorn or disagreement: like hell I'm telling a stranger my address and phone number."
Well.. I know the guy and recorded the song with him and I know that’s not what he meant, it’s like - I’m not good at much but I can sing! Anyway…
lolz
Haha 😂