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Logic Pro X Course Content
Course Fee: 35000
World renowned Apple offers its own music DAW known as Logic Pro which sets the platform for digital audio workstations, both on the Mac systems and overall. It is most economical DAW to boot in comparison to the other DAWs. Logic pro offers a fantastic package that most of the musicians and music programmers seriously indulge into.
Huge audio plug-ins, software instruments and sounds to help you give shape to your imagination. It also comes with a midi Arpeggiator through which you can insert a chord and experiment with new presets. It offers instruments and effects for melody & rhythm and many more. You also get to audition & explore a massive collection of thousands of electronic and urban loops, just to suit your own preference & style ranging from many more.
It has an inbuilt Drummer, a virtual session player that gives an effective, real and most pro sounding real drum experience. Should you need to look out for an electronic sound you can make use of “Ultrabeat” and final on the professional groove.
Logic Pro has a new interface design and it has introduced an advanced interface for professional musicians, various impressive plug-ins and sounds, and many more tools that are powerful and will give a top-notch quality with your Music creation.
Introduction
Were you aware of the unique features of Abelton live to date? Who knew it could be used for production as well as a performance tool right? If you're a performer it’s such a handy tool to incorporate into the production for every learner of music.
1 Starting a Project
2 Interface Overview
3 Project Basics
4 Navigation Control
5 Cycling Regions
A Closer Look
1 Working with Apple Loops
2 Creating and Managing Tracks
3 Track Header Function
4 The Inspector
5 Quantizing
6 Project Management
7 Zooming
8 Working with Patches
9 Folder Stacks and Folders
10 Summing Stacks
11 Project Properties
Now let's talk about the interfaces of this tool including elements like the drop-down menus that span the top of the interface and everything that surrounds its perimeter. We, therefore, have items like the tempo, metre, and metronome up here on the control bar.
The transport controls, as well as the punch in and punch out controls, are located in the middle. Additionally, there are a few buttons and mapping controls over on the right.
The process of coordinating and supervising the recording and creation of a track, from creating the initial lyrics and melodies to mastering the finished track, is known as music production. Track production, toplining, or even just mixing and mastering are just a few examples of the many distinct types of production.
Working with Midi
1 Introduction to the Drummer Track
2 Metronome Explained
3 MIDI Recording
4 Logic Pro X
5 Advance Midi
6 Introduction to the Editor
7 The Piano Roll Editing
8 MIDI Draw
In Ableton Live, the piano roll is where all the magic happens. Basslines are written, chords are created, and melodies are created. But there are still many unknowns regarding the piano roll. similar to this entire section: So, below are some of my favourite Live piano roll strategies for you to learn.
DAWs provide a wide range of options for modifying MIDI instrument output. The current industry standard for transmitting musical data between devices is MIDI.
Working with midi is working so you're writing notes as well as putting expressions. There is a simultaneous action required because without expression there is no music. To create music and tunes it's important to multitask in this way. It's an art, not just a course.
Advance Midi
The process of editing an audio's length, speed, and volume, as well as adding new versions such as loops, is known as audio editing. Although it used to be done with analogue tape and razor blades by splicing and taping in a pre-digital era, audio editing is now nearly usually done on a computer using audio editing software.
It is fairly easy to stretch time. The biggest drawback is that pitch and tempo change in relation to playback speed. However, inventive musicians would work around this by recording in a different key and tempo, then playing it back quickly to make up for the alterations.
Your automation envelopes will feel more human-like if you use curved automation lines. By gradually altering a parameter's value as well as its rate of change, it is also possible to foster sensations of intense anticipation.
Automation offers a mechanism to manage how a system's parameters vary over time. When in arrangement view in Ableton Live, you can access automation by pressing the letter "A" on the keyboard.
1 Editing the Drummer Track
2 Autopunch and Replace Mode
3 Loop Recording MIDI
4 Record Repeat and Capture as Recording
5 Musical Typing
6 Arrangement Markers
7 Loop Recording
8 Working with Takes
9 MIDI FX Teaser
10 Drum Kit Designer
Audio Editing
A plugin is an additional piece of software that you can "plug in" to your primary recording programme (in this case Ableton Live.) Basically, it enables you to improve your musical creation process by incorporating multiple instruments and effects. In the majority of DAWs, you can use two different kinds of plugins.
The Compressor, one of the most popular inserts included with Ableton Live, is a tool that alters the dynamic range of a signal by lowering the level of the loudest parts, putting the loud and quiet parts closer together in volume, and resulting in volume disparities that are less noticeable.
A track is mixed to accomplish three things. It gives the composition a more organised and polished sound. All of that fiddling with individual tracks and noises comes to an end as a result. Additionally, it prepares a stereo mix for mastering. Both Live and you are more than capable of handling all of these chores.
Abelton live has inbuilt plugins and has many audio effect creative plugins. Creating sounds using those plugins which are internal in nature. You need not explore the external plugins in that case. Unique feature such as rack isn't available in any other daw helps integrate smooth mixes in audios.
1 Working in the Region
2 Region Editing
3 Flex Pitch
4 QuickStart Flex
5 Pitch Algorithm
6 Advance Flex
7 Working with Fades
8 Audio Editing
9 Mixing Concepts
10 Working with Markers
11 Understanding Automation
12 Automation Curve
13 Advanced Automation
Mixing
1 The Mixer
2 Working with Plugin Tools
3 EQ
4 Compressor
5 Delay
6 Reverb
7 Envelope
8 Filter
9 Phaser
10 Chorus
11 Mixing
12 Aux Channel
13 Panning Balancing
14 Third-Party Effects
15 Automation
16 Buses
17 Groups
Many well-known musicians and producers use Ableton Live to mix and master their music. Although it costs more than comparable DAW software, as the name implies, it is software that shines for composition and live performances.
Whatever your goals, Ableton Live 9 features a number of tools for finalizing your tracks - most notably the Glue Compressor, EQ8, Multiband Dynamics, Saturator, and the Limiter.
It's one of the most important processes when it comes to music production after mixing because mastering is adding a commercial value to the sounds. More like giving warth to the tunes as well as your own touch & punches. In our course we explain mastering and its professional benefits in an easy manner.
Session View (ableton performance)
These top-notch hardware controllers were created in collaboration with Ableton to provide flawless Live integration. Simply plug in, put away your mouse, and get creative by jamming in session view, fiddling with sends and FX, and learning new strategies that keep you in the zone. No setup or installation is necessary.
Live allows the DJ to select a master tempo, at which all tracks are played, as opposed to having the tracks determine the tempo. Each song will play back in flawless synchrony if you accurately informed Live where the beats of your songs reside, removing the necessity to beatmatch while performing.
Ableton Live's Audio Effects are a terrific place to start if you've ever wanted to improve your sound design or create the music you want to hear. In Ableton Live, you can add Audio Effects to MIDI instruments, audio inputs, and imported samples, giving you limitless sound-shaping options.
1 Mastering Concepts
2 Mastering Tools Explained
3 Mastering Techniques
4 Ozone Explained