Mr. T I never thought of this! Do these channels really get less compensation if viewers skip ads? If so I definitely want to help, especially for channels like this.
Thank you for your descriptions. I’m completely blind, so I appreciate you using the terms that Logic uses, and also keystrokes. Voiceover uses the Logic’s terms to identify things, so when you use the term Inspector, that’s what Voiceover uses. Or if you were to talk about piano roll and other things. Even if it’s not visually name, the fact that you are describing it that way means that I can find it. And the fact that you are describing what keystrokes to use also means I don’t have to look it all up in the keyboard manager all the time. I really appreciate how you do your videos.
Best teaching I have heard yet on TH-cam, very thorough but also fast enough pace to make the learning interesting. I really like the fact you are leaving some things out until more advanced videos and still demonstrating how we can get a job done without knowing everything. Not just good instruction but superb layering of material that makes learning fun.
For the love of the art of recording, TY brother! I saw $2K for a basic course and I was not pleased. Your attention to detail was greatly appreciated. The setup was thoroughly explained, and broken down into very easy to understand segments. You're really awesome for investing the time to teach this! Many blessings upon you!!!!!
Quite simply, your videos are THE reference on the Internet for Logic Pro X training. Whenever I find myself wondering how to accomplish something in Logic, I can quickly find the answers on your channel. THANK YOU! from a loyal subscriber. One minor note: 16-bit vs 24-bit doesn't change the dynamic range (DR) of the recording. DR is the ratio of the loudest signal to the quietest signal (absolute silence, below the noise floor), often expressed in dB, and is mostly a function of your microphones and preamp gain settings. Resolution refers to how coarse/fine the amplitude (volume) steps are. 16-bit (2^16) = 65536 total volume steps from the most positive to the most negative signal vs 24-bit (2^24) = 16,777,216 total volume steps, which is 256 (!) times finer. You will most likely notice the resolution difference in quieter passages where the signals are close to the noise floor. The finer volume steps offered by 24-bit recording keep things like delicately-played cymbals sounding more natural.
Thank you for creating this series. The timing is perfect as I just decided yesterday to sit down and learn how to use LPX properly with the aim of actually creating some sounds rather than just messing around with LPX.
Maaaan! Thanks for being so kind and thoughtful and sharing! I can tell you have a passion for others in their musical praxis wanting to see them excel in every way! Thank so much! I find your videos extremely helpful and agree with the consensus that your teaching is THE BEST I've heard on youtube thus far! Brilliant work!
Josh, thank you this series it is helping me get back on track after being injured in June and not being able to keep up with my Logic Studies. BTW great guitar playing and love your vocals!
Just found your channel and this series of videos. You're a really good teacher and I appreciate the good quality and in depth teaching of these videos. Thank you for sharing your knowledge!
I've been tormenting over learning this software for years and have tried every book and spent hundreds. I'm getting into it now with your help. Huge fan MusicTechHelpGuy.
As everyone else is saying...very easy to understand tutorials ! Thank you very much! I've been looking for exactly how you're teaching this. The best !
I liked that long guitar playing during the middle of the tutorial, I watch your tutorial outside at nature with my iPad, no distractions, fun and patience :)
Wow. Amazing video VERY GOOD VOICE WELL DONE . The organization and completeness of the topics, the use of visuals, the rapid pace to keep interest up, the purposeful dialog and clear, modulated voiceover. Very professional. Thank you for your generosity in putting this together.👍👍👍👏👏👏
thank you so much! so helpful and informative and certainly infinitely better than some of the courses I have paid for. I have learnt more in these 2 lessons than I have over the last few months.
Thanks for updating with the latest LPX version. I've always been a fan of this channel. I hope in the future episodes you could talk about Vocal mixing technics, especially Vocal mixing with an already-made instrumental audio track(Besides MIDI things from the scratch)..Coz as a beginner, that's basically what I usually do until I learn more music theory and know how to compose a song. Thank you...
that moment when you look something up and come to a video that you already liked 3 years ago.. i'm sure if i go through your older tutorials, i will find many more of my "likes" (i went through your first run of logic X videos 5 or 6 years ago and they were then - just as now - the most informative ones on the web)
WOW I actually never knew Logic had effects presets for audio 😂 but this actually helps me so much, I used to attempt (and fail) at creating my own effects but now that I know it has audio presets this is gonna help a lots. Thanks so much 👍🙏
Great tutorial. I'm about to purchase a Macbook & Logic Pro. What I like is the fact that it's not based on a cheesy keyboard sound and a couple of drumbeats (and that's coming from a keyboard player). Great to see you build those acoustic & vocal tracks. Thank you!!
thank you so much sir u become my teacher I respect u a lot you are great god bless you and your family I am learning lots of knowledge from your videos .
Hi Music TechHelpGuy. Do you have any videos or any helpful information on the "recording delay" slider in the audio tab of the preferences? I'm experiencing some bad latency I've never experienced before. Even with the I/O Buffer size, there's still a noticeable amount of latency when recording. I noticed it sounds a little bit better when I drag the recording delay slider all the way down to -5000 samples. However, I'm not sure what that means. If you, or anybody has any helpful information on this, I'd appreciate it. I'm working off of a late 2014 Mac mini with 8 gigs of RAM, and a 2.6 GHz Intel Core i5 Processor. As far as I can understand, I don't think latency should be a problem. On average, my projects have no more than 60-80 tracks. Like I said, if anybody can help, I'd really appreciate it. Thanks!
Thanks, Josh. I've been away from LPX for 5 years. I loved your initial series, and love this more. I appreciate the depths you go to in explaining everything. I understand your take on double tracking acoustic. Would the same hold true for electric? I dig a big rhythm track panned L/R. Well done, fam.
Very good job As you were recording your vocals, did you press play on the guitar recording so that you can follow the tune or did you record your vocals solo. And if you were pressing play on the guitars, can Logic manage it to only record what is actually plugged in?
Sir, how do we save these presets for the next projects while opening in the beginning? I tried changing the sample rate to 48hz and when I try to open a logic it shows it has been saved in 44.1 sample rate. Thankyou!
You can’t save project settings globally. They are only saved in the project. The sample rate is associated with what sample rate your audio interface is set to, so if you set your audio interface for 48kHz outside of Logic and then open a new project it should default 48kHz, however that doesn’t really save any time cause you still have to switch the sample rate one way or another.
@MusicTechHelpGuy Thank you for the reply. Actually, my audio interface is set to 48khz default since the beginning and I once tried saving it globally while opening every individual new project. But, now here is the issue, and seems like I forgot the way of setting samples. Anyways, thank you for your time.
I don’t have the pan knobs on mine how do I get them to appear? My regions have drop down box that says Monophonic the 2nd track says Polyphonic (AUTO) I see the volume control slider but pan knobs are missing please anyone help lol
I use logic to record multitrack longform audio for video, like concerts and plays. That is where there IS a difference between AIFF, WAV and CAF and you should choose CAF in that case. Like you said, quality is the same, but it has to do with the filesize the format can write.
here is my question for you: I have a rode videomic, the basic one used mostly with gopro. It has no battery whatsoever. works on 5v. So I wanna use this microphone pluging it into my M-Audio using vxlr +, which converts +48v to 5 so that the microphone can work. I did everything you said (all you said before singing part) still I can't hear anything or I can't see any wave in the recording. I hear the waves in the input section though. What am I doing wrong? my guitar has no jack input by the way, a regular acoustic guitar.
If your mic bit-depth is 16 bit the only reason to set recording to 24 bit is for effects as you're wasting 8 bits from the unfiltered vocal input. An example is the difference between a Yeti or a Yeti Pro. 16 bit vs. 24 bit. Something like a focusrite Scarlet 2i2 sure I can bump up 24 bit/192Hz.
when i record vocals with guitar track playing in my headphones why does the vocal track records the guitar again which i am listening in my headphones for reference
When talking on panning for a “big sound” as you put it. Why Re record to pan since it was the same part and just duplicate it? And if the panning is equidistant from center why pan at all? Is there a difference
Your tutorials better than my local $400 community college course, so I'll happily turn my adblock off for you sir
@Pewdiepie's Hot Dog Boss Same here!
Mr. T I never thought of this! Do these channels really get less compensation if viewers skip ads? If so I definitely want to help, especially for channels like this.
Thank you for your descriptions. I’m completely blind, so I appreciate you using the terms that Logic uses, and also keystrokes. Voiceover uses the Logic’s terms to identify things, so when you use the term Inspector, that’s what Voiceover uses. Or if you were to talk about piano roll and other things. Even if it’s not visually name, the fact that you are describing it that way means that I can find it. And the fact that you are describing what keystrokes to use also means I don’t have to look it all up in the keyboard manager all the time. I really appreciate how you do your videos.
You walk us all through this so thoroughly. I appreciate you!
Best teaching I have heard yet on TH-cam, very thorough but also fast enough pace to make the learning interesting. I really like the fact you are leaving some things out until more advanced videos and still demonstrating how we can get a job done without knowing everything. Not just good instruction but superb layering of material that makes learning fun.
For the love of the art of recording, TY brother! I saw $2K for a basic course and I was not pleased. Your attention to detail was greatly appreciated. The setup was thoroughly explained, and broken down into very easy to understand segments. You're really awesome for investing the time to teach this! Many blessings upon you!!!!!
10:25 Not a singer? Yeah, right!
Thanks for the videos they help af lot. Hope you'll continue this series :)
Quite simply, your videos are THE reference on the Internet for Logic Pro X training. Whenever I find myself wondering how to accomplish something in Logic, I can quickly find the answers on your channel. THANK YOU! from a loyal subscriber. One minor note: 16-bit vs 24-bit doesn't change the dynamic range (DR) of the recording. DR is the ratio of the loudest signal to the quietest signal (absolute silence, below the noise floor), often expressed in dB, and is mostly a function of your microphones and preamp gain settings. Resolution refers to how coarse/fine the amplitude (volume) steps are. 16-bit (2^16) = 65536 total volume steps from the most positive to the most negative signal vs 24-bit (2^24) = 16,777,216 total volume steps, which is 256 (!) times finer. You will most likely notice the resolution difference in quieter passages where the signals are close to the noise floor. The finer volume steps offered by 24-bit recording keep things like delicately-played cymbals sounding more natural.
Thank you for creating this series. The timing is perfect as I just decided yesterday to sit down and learn how to use LPX properly with the aim of actually creating some sounds rather than just messing around with LPX.
Unreal. The time and effort put into this and the other tutorials is amazing.
Maaaan! Thanks for being so kind and thoughtful and sharing! I can tell you have a passion for others in their musical praxis wanting to see them excel in every way! Thank so much! I find your videos extremely helpful and agree with the consensus that your teaching is THE BEST I've heard on youtube thus far! Brilliant work!
Excellent course. This helps me to make my doings easier. I mett too many problems and frustrated. Your course is clear and logical. I like very much!
Josh, thank you this series it is helping me get back on track after being injured in June and not being able to keep up with my Logic Studies.
BTW great guitar playing and love your vocals!
Just found your channel and this series of videos. You're a really good teacher and I appreciate the good quality and in depth teaching of these videos. Thank you for sharing your knowledge!
Had to rewatch it just to admire how well this vid was put together!!!! ThNk you man!!!
I have learnt a lot with this course!
I love this. You showed me more in an hour than I've learned in the past year. Just GREAT!
I've been tormenting over learning this software for years and have tried every book and spent hundreds. I'm getting into it now with your help. Huge fan MusicTechHelpGuy.
As everyone else is saying...very easy to understand tutorials ! Thank you very much! I've been looking for exactly how you're teaching this. The best !
I liked that long guitar playing during the middle of the tutorial, I watch your tutorial outside at nature with my iPad, no distractions, fun and patience :)
Thank you SO MUCH for these. So incredibly helpful!
Amazing video! I have been using LPX and learning for about a year, but I still learned a lot from this!! Thank you and keep it up!
Wow. Amazing video VERY GOOD VOICE WELL DONE . The organization and completeness of the topics, the use of visuals, the rapid pace to keep interest up, the purposeful dialog and clear, modulated voiceover. Very professional. Thank you for your generosity in putting this together.👍👍👍👏👏👏
thank you so much! so helpful and informative and certainly infinitely better than some of the courses I have paid for. I have learnt more in these 2 lessons than I have over the last few months.
Superb! Really helpful. I am sooooo looking forward to the rest of the videos. I have learned loads already!
This stuff is better than most commercial courses I have seen. Thank you so much for giving this away for free :)
Thank You!, I keep coming back to your channel for guidance. 👊😊👍
"I'm not the best singer" Nah you did fine my dude.
You are unreal. God bless you for this. The entire playlist is so helpful!
Thanks a lot for this BIG HELP! Congratulations for the simplest and fastest way you provide information.
Thanks for updating with the latest LPX version. I've always been a fan of this channel. I hope in the future episodes you could talk about Vocal mixing technics, especially Vocal mixing with an already-made instrumental audio track(Besides MIDI things from the scratch)..Coz as a beginner, that's basically what I usually do until I learn more music theory and know how to compose a song. Thank you...
that moment when you look something up and come to a video that you already liked 3 years ago.. i'm sure if i go through your older tutorials, i will find many more of my "likes" (i went through your first run of logic X videos 5 or 6 years ago and they were then - just as now - the most informative ones on the web)
WOW I actually never knew Logic had effects presets for audio 😂 but this actually helps me so much, I used to attempt (and fail) at creating my own effects but now that I know it has audio presets this is gonna help a lots. Thanks so much 👍🙏
i am familiar with fl studio not that much but i do and the way you are explaining logic is just awesome i hope you keep it up keep growing brother
thank you so much for your help 😭😭 definitely gonna binge and rewatch your vids till I get the skills ingrained
Brilliant, learned more in 20 minutes than i have learned in 20 years :D
Thanks for posting this content, appreciate your delivery of the content and knowledge transfer!
Man these videos are such a great help, you deserve more views! Please keep it up! Awesome!
MusicTechHelpGuy: ok guys, I can't sing so I'm gonna give it a shot
*Music starts*
*MusicTechHelpGuy proceeding to sing like a boss*
Me: 🤯
You are incredible!
Great tutorial. I'm about to purchase a Macbook & Logic Pro. What I like is the fact that it's not based on a cheesy keyboard sound and a couple of drumbeats (and that's coming from a keyboard player). Great to see you build those acoustic & vocal tracks. Thank you!!
thank you so much sir u become my teacher I respect u a lot you are great god bless you and your family I am learning lots of knowledge from your videos .
Love your videos!
Hi Music TechHelpGuy. Do you have any videos or any helpful information on the "recording delay" slider in the audio tab of the preferences? I'm experiencing some bad latency I've never experienced before. Even with the I/O Buffer size, there's still a noticeable amount of latency when recording. I noticed it sounds a little bit better when I drag the recording delay slider all the way down to -5000 samples. However, I'm not sure what that means. If you, or anybody has any helpful information on this, I'd appreciate it. I'm working off of a late 2014 Mac mini with 8 gigs of RAM, and a 2.6 GHz Intel Core i5 Processor. As far as I can understand, I don't think latency should be a problem. On average, my projects have no more than 60-80 tracks. Like I said, if anybody can help, I'd really appreciate it. Thanks!
Videos are really good. I am really enjoying and learning Logic Pro. Thank you!!
Fantastic tutorial pal. Thank you. Simple and easy to understand. Great Job.
best descriptions on TH-cam
thank you ...... 😊
Thank you for teaching us. Highly appreciate your efforts for us.
Sound very clean!!! Which guitar have you plugged and played? That was so nice!!
You are my new hero! You are an amazing instructor...detailed, but to the point (if that makes sense). You make learning fun! 😊💟
i appreciate the efforts man.. thanks for the lessons
you sound like an great person .. would love to meet you in person someday.
Brooooo, thank you for doing this page. This is awesome 👏🏽
A big up to you sir for helping other people create music! Thanks!
Great tutorials ... i'm looking forward for the next one ...
You helped me pass University. Thank you, sensei.
What ive been missing out, just subscribed to this awsome channel. :)
Thanks so much, extremely helpful and detailed 👍👍
Best tutorials about logic,,,
Very helpful! Practical and simple steps to follow! Thank you!
Thank you so much! Very pleasant voice and easy to understand.
Thanks, Josh. I've been away from LPX for 5 years. I loved your initial series, and love this more. I appreciate the depths you go to in explaining everything. I understand your take on double tracking acoustic. Would the same hold true for electric? I dig a big rhythm track panned L/R.
Well done, fam.
Dude holy crap your voice really works well with acoustic guitar style.
You are a Genius Sir. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Unchecking that "Input monitor" preference was huge; good lookin out.
Great video bro I'm new to this but if i watch this over and over im sure I'll be slightly ready in a few day
Legit!! thanx a lot
Great video and voice. Thanks
Thank you so much! Great series so far.
You're amazing teacher
Great voice my friend
Great comprehensive tutorial! Thank you so much!
Very good job
As you were recording your vocals, did you press play on the guitar recording so that you can follow the tune or did you record your vocals solo. And if you were pressing play on the guitars, can Logic manage it to only record what is actually plugged in?
Sir, how do we save these presets for the next projects while opening in the beginning? I tried changing the sample rate to 48hz and when I try to open a logic it shows it has been saved in 44.1 sample rate. Thankyou!
You can’t save project settings globally. They are only saved in the project. The sample rate is associated with what sample rate your audio interface is set to, so if you set your audio interface for 48kHz outside of Logic and then open a new project it should default 48kHz, however that doesn’t really save any time cause you still have to switch the sample rate one way or another.
@MusicTechHelpGuy Thank you for the reply. Actually, my audio interface is set to 48khz default since the beginning and I once tried saving it globally while opening every individual new project. But, now here is the issue, and seems like I forgot the way of setting samples. Anyways, thank you for your time.
Excellent Info, Thanks
A literal god send. Thank you so much
I was about to spend some £ on a Udemy course. These videos are just what I wanted. I will join your Patreon.
EXTREMELY helpful and easy to follow.......I have subscribed. Thank you.
I don’t have the pan knobs on mine how do I get them to appear? My regions have drop down box that says Monophonic the 2nd track says Polyphonic (AUTO) I see the volume control slider but pan knobs are missing please anyone help lol
This is an excellent lesson, very appropriate for a beginner. thanks
Wow man your voice is amazing! And big thanks for the tutorials!
This was a better binge than breaking bad
Great Prifessional Explanation!
Unbelievably helpful, thank you!
Great lesson, so easy to follow.
I use logic to record multitrack longform audio for video, like concerts and plays. That is where there IS a difference between AIFF, WAV and CAF and you should choose CAF in that case. Like you said, quality is the same, but it has to do with the filesize the format can write.
the best tutorial iv ever seen
Thank you! So thorough and easy to understand!
Go Guru!
Absolutely the best!
here is my question for you: I have a rode videomic, the basic one used mostly with gopro. It has no battery whatsoever. works on 5v. So I wanna use this microphone pluging it into my M-Audio using vxlr +, which converts +48v to 5 so that the microphone can work. I did everything you said (all you said before singing part) still I can't hear anything or I can't see any wave in the recording. I hear the waves in the input section though. What am I doing wrong? my guitar has no jack input by the way, a regular acoustic guitar.
If your mic bit-depth is 16 bit the only reason to set recording to 24 bit is for effects as you're wasting 8 bits from the unfiltered vocal input.
An example is the difference between a Yeti or a Yeti Pro. 16 bit vs. 24 bit.
Something like a focusrite Scarlet 2i2 sure I can bump up 24 bit/192Hz.
i didn't get what tape delay means? I'm unable to notice the difference between the before and after.
thank you so much for these videos.
Thank you.
great explanation
Very helpful video! and you sing well
when i record vocals with guitar track playing in my headphones
why does the vocal track records the guitar again which i am listening in my headphones for reference
Am so grateful wish I found this video earlier 😢
When talking on panning for a “big sound” as you put it. Why Re record to pan since it was the same part and just duplicate it? And if the panning is equidistant from center why pan at all?
Is there a difference
Great video, Very helpful.