paisleywookiee
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Apple Releases Logic Pro 12: When Chords Start to Collaborate
In Apple’s new Logic Pro 12, a few chords can give rise to entire soundscapes that seem to develop almost on their own. Out now!
Agreed. That being said, I've loved Logic for quite awhile, so I'm happy with its progression.Glad it’s a free update as it doesn’t seem too substantial. The major increments in version numbers seem to have more to do with which computers they’re severing updates for, than introducing any major upgrades. Things have kind of trickled along since X (which was really the last major change, IMO).
I just used it to fill out an arrangement around a guitar riff I laid down. Dragged the audio up to the chord track to get the chords, then set the bass player and a couple of keyboard tracks to follow the guitars track along with the chords. Chord ID made one error, but I fixed that. Bass track is much better than I expected and far better than I could do myself for a quick demo.Downloading. The chord id feature is something I've wanted for a while.
and I am very happy that I switched to Cubase a few years ago.
The problem is that it is unlikely to get any better, quite the contrary. Apple will continue to tailor Logic to the needs of beatmakers and social media content creators, while old-school musicians like us will be completely ignored. It was already obvious with Logic 11, but 12 is now the final confirmation of this direction.Should've done that myself. Now it's possibly too late to switch (too invested in Logic for a variety of reasons, not getting younger, either).
As much as I share your wishes, from Apple's perspective, why wouldn't they go that route? I'd imagine the vast majority of Logic users aren't guys recording live sessions or rock bands etc. Logic has always been pretty atrocious for audio editing, but aside from getting that sorted, I'm not sure there's really much else to do on that side? Maybe you have some things you'd like to see them implement?The problem is that it is unlikely to get any better, quite the contrary. Apple will continue to tailor Logic to the needs of beatmakers and social media content creators, while old-school musicians like us will be completely ignored. It was already obvious with Logic 11, but 12 is now the final confirmation of this direction.
I went with Cubase because I need something that works with Windows and MacOS. Having used mostly Logic before it, I found a lot of things a bit annoying but have gotten used to how the Cubase way works. Thankfully there's tons of YT tutorials for it.Perhaps you should just give it a go and install the 60-day trial version of Cubase. You could use it alongside Logic at first to see how you get on. I'm not the youngest anymore either, but I quickly learned how to use it.
I actually agree with you completely. My post wasn't intended as a demand to Apple. I just think that we old-school musicians aren't really their target group anymore, and as a result, they aren't developing Logic to include or improve features that might be important to most of us. It's perfectly fine that they tailor Logic to a specific group. I simply don't belong to that group, that's all.As much as I share your wishes, from Apple's perspective, why wouldn't they go that route? [...]
Ha yeah. I think so much of what I actually want to see from Logic would require a total overhaul that its pretty unlikely to happen regardless and sort of why I just opted to move on. Very occasionally I'll do some writing or preproduction in Logic and I dont mind it for throwing ideas about quickly. Using it what its good for, and using other software for everything else really isn't a bad option.I actually agree with you completely. My post wasn't intended as a demand to Apple. I just think that we old-school musicians aren't really their target group anymore, and as a result, they aren't developing Logic to include or improve features that might be important to most of us. It's perfectly fine that they tailor Logic to a specific group. I simply don't belong to that group, that's all.
Perhaps you should just give it a go and install the 60-day trial version of Cubase.