Logic Pro Remote Class - Learn Logic Pro Remote for iPad & iOS | Martin Svensson | Skillshare

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Logic Pro Remote Class - Learn Logic Pro Remote for iPad & iOS

teacher avatar Martin Svensson, Learning music creation since 2006.

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Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Introduction

      4:32

    • 2.

      Setting Up The Logic Pro Remote App

      4:00

    • 3.

      Getting Help in The Logic Pro Remote App

      3:59

    • 4.

      The Control Bar

      7:07

    • 5.

      Recording

      3:09

    • 6.

      The Mixer

      5:51

    • 7.

      Working with Plug-Ins

      5:46

    • 8.

      Automation in Logic Pro Remote App

      4:47

    • 9.

      Chords Strips, Scaled and Modes

      9:50

    • 10.

      Guitar and Strings Instruments - Part 1

      8:55

    • 11.

      Guitar and Strings Instruments - Part 2

      2:39

    • 12.

      Drum Pads in Logic Pro Remote - Part 1

      9:07

    • 13.

      Drum Pads in Logic Pro Remote - Part 2

      4:17

    • 14.

      Live Loops - Part 1

      8:33

    • 15.

      Live Loops - Part 2

      5:15

    • 16.

      Remix FX - Recording & Live - Part 1

      5:41

    • 17.

      Remix FX - Recording & Live - Part 2

      6:50

    • 18.

      The Step Sequencer

      5:52

    • 19.

      Smart Controls

      5:31

    • 20.

      Smart Controls Explained

      4:42

    • 21.

      Overview of Key Commands and Customizing

      7:18

    • 22.

      The Library

      5:13

    • 23.

      Apple Loops in Logic Pro Remote

      8:04

    • 24.

      Plug-In Settings

      2:08

    • 25.

      Logic Remote for the iPhone

      2:32

    • 26.

      Join the LogicPro.Academy!

      4:33

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About This Class

Master Logic Pro Remote: Control Your Projects Seamlessly with Your iPad or iPhone

Do you want to take your Logic Pro workflow to the next level? Imagine being able to control your entire Logic Pro session—recording, mixing, and performing—all from your iPad or iPhone. With Logic Pro Remote, this dream becomes a reality. Whether you’re working in your studio, recording across the room, or experimenting with live loops during a performance, Logic Pro Remote puts complete control right at your fingertips.

In this comprehensive Logic Pro Remote Course, you’ll learn how to harness the full power of this incredible iOS app to streamline your music production, improve your efficiency, and unlock your creative potential. Whether you’re a beginner just starting with Logic Pro or a seasoned producer, this course is your step-by-step guide to mastering Logic Pro Remote.

What is Logic Pro Remote?

Logic Pro Remote is a free iOS app that transforms your iPad or iPhone into a wireless control surface for Logic Pro on your Mac. This powerful tool allows you to:

•Record and play tracks remotely.

•Control your mixer and adjust plugins with a touch.

•Play Touch Instruments, including guitars, synths, strings, and drum pads.

•Trigger Live Loops for dynamic performances.

•Add Remix FX in real time to enhance creativity.

No longer do you need to be glued to your computer. Whether you’re sitting on your couch, recording yourself from across the room, or standing during a live session, Logic Pro Remote gives you the freedom to control Logic Pro from anywhere.

Why Take This Logic Pro Remote Course?

This course is designed to teach you everything you need to know about Logic Pro Remote, step by step. You’ll start from the basics—like setting up the app and navigating its interface—and move on to advanced techniques that will transform the way you produce music.

With clear, easy-to-follow lessons and hands-on examples, this course will help you:

•Streamline your workflow for faster music production.

•Record with ease, whether you’re alone or working with others.

•Enhance your creativity by using Touch Instruments and Remix FX.

•Take advantage of the iPad’s touch interface for intuitive mixing, playing, and performing.

By the end of this course, you’ll know how to fully integrate Logic Pro Remote into your production process, saving you time and giving you complete control over your projects.

Who Is This Course For?

This course is perfect for anyone using Logic Pro on a Mac:

•Beginners who want to learn how to control Logic Pro with their iPad or iPhone.

•Intermediate producers looking to streamline their workflow and experiment with new tools.

•Professional music producers who want to integrate Logic Pro Remote for better control during sessions and live performances.

•Songwriters who need flexibility while recording and arranging their tracks.

If you have an iPad or iPhone and want to make the most out of Logic Pro Remote, this course is for you!

Here’s What You’ll Learn in the Logic Pro Remote Course

1. Getting Started with Logic Pro Remote

•How to download, set up, and connect Logic Pro Remote to your Mac.

•Navigating the app interface and using the built-in help features.

•Understanding the connection settings for seamless wireless control.

2. Control Bar and Recording

•Play, stop, and navigate your Logic Pro projects directly from your iPad.

•Record hands-free while working across the room or controlling multiple takes.

•How to use the control bar effectively for a smooth production experience.

3. Mixing and Controlling Plugins

•Adjust mixer levels, pan, and solo/mute tracks remotely.

•Open, control, and tweak plugins on your tracks.

•Automate parameters from your iPad for dynamic mixes.

4. Playing with Touch Instruments

•Discover how to play and record Touch Instruments:

•Chord Strips for chords and melodies.

•Guitar and Strings for realistic string instrument performances.

•Drum Pads for beats and rhythm programming.

•Keyboards for playing synths and pianos.

•Learn how to layer instruments and perform expressive parts with the touch interface.

5. Live Loops and Remix FX

•Trigger Live Loops to create beats, loops, and sections on the fly.

•Use Remix FX to add real-time effects like filters, gates, and reverbs during recording or performance.

•Experiment with loops and effects to create dynamic arrangements quickly.

6. Smart Controls and Customization

•Customize your Smart Controls to make quick adjustments to any plugin or track parameter.

•Learn how to tailor Smart Control layouts to fit your workflow.

7. Key Commands and Advanced Settings

•Use key commands for quick actions in Logic Pro Remote.

•Access Apple Loops and manage audio libraries remotely.

•Adjust advanced plugin settings from your iPad for detailed control.

8. Logic Pro Remote for iPhone

•Learn how to use Logic Pro Remote on your iPhone for ultimate portability.

•Discover which features work best on the smaller screen and how to optimize your experience.

Why Logic Pro Remote is a Game-Changer

Logic Pro Remote gives you unmatched flexibility and convenience. Here’s why you’ll love it:

•Hands-Free Recording: Record yourself playing an instrument or vocals without running back to your computer.

•Efficient Mixing: Adjust faders, panning, and effects directly from your iPad for faster workflows.

•Enhanced Creativity: Experiment with loops, effects, and touch instruments that make music production fun and intuitive.

•Live Performance Ready: Use Live Loops and Remix FX to perform live or jam out ideas in real time.

•Stay Mobile: Control Logic Pro anywhere in your studio or even on the go.

What You’ll Achieve By the End of This Course

By the end of this Logic Pro Remote Course, you’ll:

✅ Be confident using Logic Pro Remote on both iPad and iPhone.

✅ Know how to record, mix, and play instruments hands-on with the app.

✅ Master advanced features like Live Loops, Smart Controls, and Remix FX.

✅ Boost your music production workflow and unlock creative tools you didn’t know existed.

✅ Save time and make music more efficiently—wherever you are.

Why Learn From Me?

I’m Martin Svensson, and I’ve been teaching music production on Udemy since 2014. With almost 100,000 students worldwide, I’m proud to be one of Udemy’s top instructors. My courses are designed to be clear, practical, and easy to follow, helping you get results quickly. Whether you’re a beginner or a professional, I’ll guide you step by step so you can take full control of Logic Pro Remote.

Ready to Master Logic Pro Remote? Let’s Get Started!

If you’re ready to unlock the full potential of Logic Pro Remote and transform the way you produce music, this course is for you. Grab your iPad or iPhone, connect to Logic Pro, and let’s dive in!

Meet Your Teacher

Teacher Profile Image

Martin Svensson

Learning music creation since 2006.

Teacher


- Founder and Owner of music-prod, a platform with courses for learning Music Production and how to be a musician today with over 10 000 Subscribers. 

- Music Producer and Professional musician. Producing music for 10+ years with Logic Pro X and Ableton Live. Produced music for several big labels and for other Producers, Dj's and big names in the music industry.

- Certified Apple Logic Pro X Producer since 2015.

I have a lot of experience in making music in different studios here in Stockholm, Sweden and also in Los Angeles, California. I've been making music with big names as well as teaching how to make music since 5 years. 

I'm now into teaching music on the web as well as making different businesses because I really wa... See full profile

Level: All Levels

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Transcripts

1. Introduction: Hey, there, and welcome to the Logic Pro remote course. Whether you're producing music in your studio or working remotely, Logic Pro Remote is an absolute game changer, and I'm here to show you exactly why. In this course, I'll walk you through everything you need to know about Logic Pro remote from setting up the app, recording with these, controlling your mix, playing touch instruments to experimenting with live loops and remix effects. It's all here. And yes, you can do all of this from your iPad or even your iPhone straight from your fingertips. Logic Pro remote lets you control your projects without being glued to your desk. Imagine being able to mix a track while sitting on your couch or recording yourself across the room hands free. This app makes your workflow smoother, faster and way more fun. This course is perfect for beginners and pros alike. No matter your level, you'll walk away knowing how to make the most of Logic Pro remote. So grab your iPad or even your iPhone, fire up Logic Pro, and let's dive in. I'm so excited for you to unlock all these features and take your production workflow to the next level. Let's get started. See you in the first lesson. Okay, guys. So before we start with this course, I'm just going to briefly go over the requirements for this course. So these are the things you need to attend this course, the Logic Pro remote course. So for this course, you need a Mac computer. You also need an IOS or an iPad OS device. So a Mac computer, MacBook Pro, IMAC, whatever Mac computer you have so it can run Logic Pro. Then you want to have an IOS or an iPad OS device. So you either want an iPhone or an iPad. And I'm going to be honest with you and you're also going to see this in this course, I would not rather do the iPhone route here. I would do the iPad one because there's a lot more screen real estate on the iPad, and it's going to work perfect. Can still work with just an iPhone for the Logic Pro remote course and also for the logic remote app. But it's not going to be the same experience. So I really recommend you to get an iPad. You also need the Logic Pro app, of course. And you can download the free trial as well, and it works just as the full version. You don't need to necessarily purchase the Logic Pro app for now, but it will work for 60 or 90 days, something like that, for a free trial. You also want some sample packs. So, the Logic Pro app itself comes with a lot of Apple loops, and you can also download free samples. And I'm going to show you how you can download these free samples. So first of all, I want to show you what kind of setup we recommend to use. So if you go to the website, musicp.com slash SETUP, then you are here on our setup page. So you can see you have a lot of different MacBooks, Mac, Mac Studio, McMini and IMAC. All of these here will work perfectly with Logic Pro. So one of these are very, very good to have and is recommended for Logic Pro. You can't run Logic Pro on a Windows computer. And then for the iPad, I would go with the regular iPad. This is the best thing to have because it works so good. It's not like the logic remote app itself needs a lot of resources because it just mirrors the things that you do on your Mac. So regular iPad, even the older ones, works perfectly. You can get an iPad Pro, of course, if you want the bigger sized one, but it's not necessary for the logic remote. If you go to this website, apple.com slash LogPAShTRL, then you will get the Logic Pro app free for 90 days. So here you can use the Logic Pro app, like the full version, there's no restrictions or anything like that. The only restriction we have here is that it works for 90 days only. You can just press the Download Now button and it will download it for you and you can work with Logic Pro free from today and 90 days onward. If you go to this website here, musicb.com slash UDM free, you can also get access to all of our sample packs for free. So you just go to this website here, click on Submit, and you will get all of the sample packs as well. And you can use this for Logipro and for the Logic Remote app as well. Okay, guys, that are all the requirements for this course. Now in the next video, I will show you how to work with Logic Remote. Okay, so see you in the next video. 2. Setting Up The Logic Pro Remote App: Okay, so, in this video, I'm going to show you how to set up the Logic Pro remote app. So first of all, you can see here, I already have my Logic remote app here, but if we want to download it, we have to go to the app store, and we have to search here and search for Logic remote. And there you have it Logic remote. You can see it's from Apple. And since I already downloaded this app, it says open here, but you have to download it first, of course. So let's just launch it here. I'm going to hit Open. And now you can see we have select the application to control. So you can see here we have Martin's MacBook Pro, which is my MacBook Pro, and this is also the screen that you can see here. And you can also see here. Please make sure that a MAC running Logic Pro, Garage Band, or Mintge is on the same network as your iPad or connected via USB cable. So you can see here I got the iPad with USBC. But if you got an iPad with Lightning, you have to have a Lightning to USB. Cable so you can connect it to your MacBook. You can also run it through Wi Fi. So by doing that, you have to be connected to Wi Fi on your iPad, and your MacBook needs to be connected to the same network as well. And then you will also be able to see select the application to control. You can also use the iPhone for the same thing. Logic Remote also works on iPhones, but then you will have a very, very small display, so it makes a lot more sense to use it on iPad. So we're going to use the iPad for this course here. But other than that, the iPhone works as well, and you can also see the same thing, just a lot smaller. For this course, I'm going to use the USB C cable here that I have connected. And this is just because I think it's going to be a lot more stable when we're using it for Logic Pro, but you can use it with Wi Fi, of course, as well. I tried Wi Fi many times when I'm using Logic Pro remote and it works great as well. But I prefer to have my iPad charged all the time, so it won't run out of battery when I'm doing my long project sessions or studio sessions. So therefore, I use the cable for this course. So just to recap here, you have to have Logic Pro open up on your Mac. Then you have to have the iPad connected to your Mac or to the same Wi Fi network as your Mac or MacBook or whatever Mac device you're using should be connected to the same network as well as the iPad. And then you're going to hit Logic Remote on your iPad, and then you will see that it will find your Mac device here. Okay, so let's try to connect the logic remote app here to Logic Pro on our MacBook. So let's do this. Let's hit it here. And now you can see it's on Instrument one track, as the same one as we have on our Mac here. So it's the same thing. You can also see we have three channels here. We have Instrument one, stereo and Master channel. So if you open up the mixer here on Logic Pro on our computer on our Mac, you can see we have the same channels here. So if I click a channel here, you can also see it changes here on the remote app, and this is the thing that we want here with the remote with remote app, actually. So it's very easy to just control it like this. So if I do something here on my iPad, it's going to do the same thing on my Mac and vice versa. And as I mentioned before, you can also use garage band for this app. So it's not just for Logic Pro, it's also for garage band and for the main stage app. So if you want to change between those apps here, you can go to the settings icon here and you can see that we have our computer here, our running MacBook Pro, and you can see the Logic Pro icon here. So if I would have garage pan open up here, it will show up here and I can just switch between those, basically. Okay, guys, that is it for this video. Hope to see you in another one. 3. Getting Help in The Logic Pro Remote App: Okay, so in this video, I'm going to show you how you can get help in the Logic remote app. So if you're a beginner user of Logic Pro, there could be a lot of things that you don't know about Logic Pro or don't know about logic remote, and that's obviously why you're taking this course. But I'm going to show you a few different methods here where you can get help directly from the app itself. And this is very handy to have if you're just wondering something or let's say that something's going on here, you don't know what's going on. So first of all, if you go to the settings knob here and if you put the coaching tips on you can see you have different labels here. So you can see what this is all about. Let's say, learn more about the control bar. If you click it here, you will have a help section that explains everything about the control bar here, and same thing if you do something else here. So this is very handy to have because it's very nice to learn about different parts and certainly the most essential part. And this is where the coaching tips is showing up. This applies to all different pages and views here. Let's say that we go to live loops here. You can see here we have different coaching tips for those. Mixer. Yeah, we went there, key commands, for instance, we can see here and smart controls, we can see as well what all this does here. So if you go back to the mixer, so here we're back in the mixer. You can also go to help here and you would have a user manual for the Logic Remote app. You can see here all of these chapters here and everything that you can find in the help section here is just for the Logic Remote app, and it doesn't contain any help about Logic Pro or the Logic Pro app for the Mac, of course. So here we can browse around different topics. If we want to find something, you can also search here, of course. So let's just take the coaching tips off here. And there's one more way you can get some help here in a logic remotap. And that's the Smart help section here. So here you can see we have Logic Pro user guide. So here you can see the difference. We have the Logic Pro manual, basically. But why this does it very interesting instead of just having a regular manual for Logic Pro is that now if you go to Logic Pro, let's say that we point over something, let's say, a track here. You can see rename tracks in Logic Pro for Mac is showing up. So as soon as I switch to something, let's say a region here, resize regions in Logic Pro because I have the resize, as you can see here on my screen. So if I go to just like this, I double click here, and here I have the audio track editor, and it's going to explain everything about the audio track editor. It's just that easy to find different things, and this is why it makes so nice to have this iPad app up whenever I work on my Logic Pro app for my Mac. So, yeah, you can see, it's very easy to just read on different things here. Smart Tempo, let's say, yeah, you can read about almost all of the different features in Logic Per. So that is a very good thing. And let's say that we're hovering about, let's say, here we have a region, right? And we want to read about this region but if we go off with the mouse, you can see it's going to something else, right, because I'm pointing at something else. If I go back here and just hit the lock button here, now I can do whatever I want to here and I can still read on this topic here and just call me read it so I know what it's all about. You can also use this for garage band and for mainstage as well. So if you choose to use garage band, then you will have the garage bands user manual here and it will do exactly the same thing. This is a very cool thing to have, but it's a lot more to the logic remote app, of course. So in the next video, we're going to take a look at the control bar, see you there. 4. The Control Bar: Okay, so in this video, I'm going to show you all about the Control bar in Logic remote aap. So as you might know, if we go to Logic Remote here, you can see we have the mixer as our default view here, and you can also see the control bar here in the upper section. And this is visually the same thing as the control bar that we have in Logic Pro, which you also can find in all different views in Logic Pro. And that's the same thing here in the Logic remote app. So if you go to something else like live loops, you can still see the control the control bar, of course. So if you change something, let's say change the beat or something like that, then it's going to change the same thing here in the remote app. So it's just like a mirror of your Logic Pro app on your Mac. So as per default here, you can see it's showing bars and beats here in the LCD screen. But we can also change this, of course. If you go to custom here, you can see it's changed like this here. But if you want to change it here in the remote app so you have to go to file, project settings, then we have to go to General, and then we go to project type and antique this use musical grid here. So if you do this, you can see here now instead of bars and beats, it's showing us minutes and seconds. This also showing us here in Logic Pro here as well. And then we have the lower section here of the LD screen, which is showing us our arrangement markers here. So now we are at the intro section here. So if you scroll around here, you can see that it changes depending on what we have here. So if you go here, you can see, we have the markers and then introverse precorus and chorus and verse. So this is something that you can adjust in Logic Pro, but this is going to show the exact same as it shows on Logic Pro. So that is what it shows us here. If you go to a different view, let's say that we go to Smart Controls. Now it's going to show us our track name here. So if we just choose different track, you can see here I have my base and it's showing it's track number 33 and it's called base here. Can also browse around the different tracks here. So you have those two different arrows here. So if you go here, you can see that we're browsing around, let's say, we're going down here, and we have different guitar. So as soon as I browse or scroll around different instruments or different tracks here, you can see all of those have different settings here depending on what instrument is played for this track, of course. So if we go back here, let's say that we go to mixer here. Now you can see it's showing right and left. And this is because we have our mixer channel. So if I want to go one position on the right, then just go to right here and left. So that's just as easy like that. So one more thing you can do here with LCD screen is if we click the LCD screen, we can see the playhead marker here. And this is very nice to have because we can now scroll around it like this. You can also see the different arrangement markers here, of course, and you can scroll around like this. So this is a very nice thing as well. You can also navigate through your arrangement here as well. So if you can also zoom like this, you can also play. You can stop and you can browse around the different parts here. So you can see I browse with my finger here, but it also corresponds on Logic Pros position here on my Mac. All right, so that's some pretty quick navigation here through our Logic Pro project. There's even one more quicker way to navigate through our project. So if we close this here, and if you just tap and hold on this, you can see we have tracks and markers here in the list. So now you can see I'm browsing around all of my different tracks that I have in my project file. So let's say that I want to go to this one here. Now I can see the base drop here. And if I just hold it like this and I want to go to the course, now I'm in the chorus section. So if I click here, you can see course. Hold this here, bridge, and now I'm at the bridge section. So then we have here you can see the view controls here, so we can choose different views. And I just showed you briefly how it is, but I'm going to cover that later on as well as the library button that we have here. Then we have the transport control buttons, which you can see here it's go to the beginning here or play. We have the stop button here when it's playing, and when it's not played, you have go to beginning. You can also record here. So it's the same thing as you would record in Logic Pro. Then you have the cycle mode here, so it's the same thing as in logic and the metronome button. So if I have, let's say, the metronome button on, I'm playing. You can hear that the metronome is playing there. Then we have the effects button here, and the effix is a very cool way to do different effects. And I'm going to show you that in a separate video as well as the library button here. But yeah, it's a very nice thing. I'm going to show you. Okay, so let's close out of that now for now. So now we have the gear icon here, and this is the settings. So here you can have a, you have different settings, of course, undo and redo. You have save project. You can duplicate selected track. You can also create new tracks from here. So it's the same thing as in logic, of course, new audio track or new software instrument track or any other track like that. You can add this directly here in logic. Can also choose and set different tempo and signature here. You can see you can also tap to set tempos. That is a very nice thing. Let's say that you play a song or something like that that you want to or a drum loop, for instance, that you have in logic, then you can just tap like this, and it will set the tempo or you can also scroll the tempo here. You can also have different time signatures, and you can have different key signatures. So it's the same thing as in logic, of course. Let's go back out of here. You also have velocity range. So velocity range is basically how much of velocity you want to have for the touch instruments that I'm going to show you later on, of course. So we have different instruments and different pianos and stuff like that. So, when you have a synth or you have a media keyboard, then it's going to be velocity because it depends on how much or how hard you play on it. Now for the touch controls here, you can set the velocity range. So let's say you don't want to maybe hammer your iPad all the time, then you can just put the velocity range. Then just as I told you before, this is the different systems or different apps. You can have garage band here or you can have main stage here as well. Help. I already covered that as same thing with the coaching tips. Then you have the Allow iPad to sleep. Allow iPad to sleep. Yeah, so you can have this on if you want the iPad to go to sleep, basically. When you're playing around the logic remote, if you put this off here, it's going to be on all the time, and it's going to override the system setting that you have on your iPad. Going to leave it off, of course, because if I work on Logic Pro, I have the cable connector here, so it's getting the power is not going to run out of battery, so it's better to have it on off here. Okay, guys, that is it for this video. Hope to see you in the next one. 5. Recording: Okay, so in this video, I want to show you very quickly how to record different medi or guitar or any other instrument in or a medi in. So first of all, have all of my tracks here, and I have a new track here that I call piano with a piano sound. Here you can see the studio piano is on here. So I'm just going to play something together with my track here and also record it, of course. And I think there is something missing here in the song, so I'm just going to record this very simple thing just so you can see how you record. So first of all, you have to choose the track that you want to record with. So we have all of those tracks you can see you have here. So if you go to piano here, it's selected now, I can just go ahead and record it and play on my midi keyboard here. So I'm just going to show you the midi keyboard here just very briefly like this. Okay, so now I have my piano or my media keyboard, and I'm just going to record. So let's hit record here. And this is the very good thing or the very nice thing here with the Logic Remote app that I can have my iPad somewhere, like, very far away from my Macbook, and that is why it's very nice to have it connected with Wi Fi as well. So you don't have to be connected to your Mac. You can just unplug it and have your iPad somewhere else in the room. Let's say that you have a guitar that you have in a studio room or somewhere else where you don't have your Mac near can just have this with you and you can steer Logic Pro with this logic remote aap where you have your instrument. Okay, so I'm just going to record it and you can see what I mean by this. By started my day. Didn't even step up to the plate. Then you're already playing mind games. I might. I might, I might. Bring it downstairs. Middle of the night thought I left the oven on, 'cause you said you guess, like, always looking down, 'cause you thank you, but we know you're so full of it you even your dinner? Dt up. Swing. Alright, so now I have my recording here. You can see it on Logic Pro that we have our region here recorded. And I'm going to adjust the volume here of the mixer. Belly started my day. Didn't even step up to the plate. Then you're already playing mind games. I might. I might, I might. Bring downstairs. Middle of the night thought sounds pretty good. And as you can see, I have to have this record button here on if I want to record something, of course. So if you feel like you have selected an instrument here and you hit record and there's nothing going on there, then you have to have the record button on. You can see it's selected here, so that's the only thing. And the record button is usually selected when you select the track here. If you have the record button on and hit record, it's going to record that instrument that you have plugged into that track. Okay, so we're going to take away this midi keyboard here for now and get back to the original position here of iPad. It's very easy and nice just recording and playing around very, very briefly here with my Logic Remote app. And that is it for this video. Hope to see you in another one. 6. The Mixer: Okay, I so in this video, we're going to talk about the mixer section in Logic remote app. So the Logic remote gives you access to remote accessing the mixer in Logic Pro. Logic remote is defaulting to the mixer view here when you're opening up the app. But if it doesn't, or if you're not in the mixer, you just go to the view section here and click on the mixer to go back to the mixer. And in my opinion, the best feature in Logic remote here is the faders, the volume faders here. If you've ever mixed on a real hardware mixer, then you know the convenience and easy way to move around different faders physically with your fingers. So that is what is actually going on here with logic remote. So it enables you to move the faders with your fingers instead of just clicking it in with your mouse in Logic Pro. So a part of the faders, what more does the mixing view gives us? So it shows us one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, and 11 mixer channels here. And depending on the size of your iPad, it's going to show less or more mixer channels here. But it also shows the master channel all the time here. So even though I go to different sections here of the mixer, you can see I can scroll through the mixer here or I can also scroll it here. You can see that it always shows the master channel here. So here you have Master channel. You have the pan and volume of all of the mixer channels here. You can see we have the sends here. So this is the sends for each mixer channel. You have audio effxes, so all of the different effect plugins that you have on each channel is going to show up here. You can also see input and output and media effects if you have any mixing channel here. So you can also select one of the mixer channels by clicking here. You can also see its changes here on MogicPVew here. You can also change them by going to the arrows here, just as I showed you before. So there's also four buttons here on each mixer channel. So you can see if we go here to the automation knob here, you can have different automation modes here. So you can see it's on Read for this track, for instance, and then you have the record arm button here if you want to record something that I showed you earlier, and you have the mute and solo buttons there, of course, as well. You can also mute and solo here, but I can also swipe. So if I go here and I swipe left here, you can see it's muting all of them, and same thing. If I want to disable them, I can just do it like this to solo them instead. So I'm not going to do that. I'm just going to disable it, and I'm going to unmute them as well. And as you can see here, it lags out a bit sometimes, so I can just do it like this and I can just reset mute to reset that. So that's why you have those buttons here. You can reset mute and you can also recall solo as well. So the recall solo is if you want to get back those, and then you have the clear solo here if you want to clear it out. So that's the thing that it does. So you can reset the mute. You can also recall the solo here as well, so it goes back to the section that you had before. And this is muted because we have one of the tracks here, soloed. You can see there. So if I go with this, I can now recall solo. So that is soloed. And if I go back, now everything is on and enabled, basically. Then you also have a mute button here for the master channel and a dim button for the master channel. So the mute button is just taking away all of the sounds from the master channel, and the dim button is just dimming it like you're dimming your lights, right? So it just picks all of the signal just a bit lower, just so you can hear if you're doing a vocal thing or if you just want to talk to somebody or something like that, they can just press the dim button, and it still plays, but in like 50% volume. So then we have the pan control here, as you can see, so I can just pan this to the side. I can do it with all of the tracks here. And let's say that I want it to be back to where it was. I can do it like this with my fingers and maybe hit it right. But I can also just double tap it like this and it will return to its default. Same thing here with volume faders here as well. So if I go to a volume fader, I just, like, do something like this. And now I want it to be back when it was. I can just do it like this, and now it's on zero, right? So that's the same thing here. You can just make it to the faul tier by just double tapping like that. So it's the same thing as the pan knobs here. Okay, so we have all of these knobs here and faders, but where's the rest, right? So if I go to sens here, you have all of the sens, as I showed you before, and you have sends one to six showing up. And this is because there's $0.06 in this project file. So if you would have more sens, it would show more sense here or even one more button here to show the rest of the cents. If you go to Audioffc here, you can see audio effects one to 13. Same thing here because we have a track that has a lot of different effects here. So it's going to show one to 13. Otherwise, it's going to show even more here as well, and also one more button if I have even more effects to one track. So it's showing us all of the different audio effects here. And you can also open up these plugins here because each of them are a plugin. So let's say that I have fatty effects here, I can press it and open plugin and it will show us all of these different parameters. I'm going to cover that in a later video, so I'm going to go back also create a new audio effect here. So if I go to just press empty space here, choose plugin, and I can choose between different plugins here. I can do that as well from the Logic Remote app. So let's go to IO here. This is input and outputs. Media effects. Media effects is basically just showing the media effects that you have on your tracks. All right, so that is the mixer view in Logic remote. In the next video, we're going to cover how to work with different plugins in Logic remote, see you there. 7. Working with Plug-Ins: Okay, so in this video, we're going to work with plug ins in Logic remote. So to access the plugins, you have to go to Audio Effexs here, and now you can see all of the effect plugins that we have in Logic Pro. This is all of the plugins that we have in our project file. So here you can see we have all of the different effect plugins. You can see if you can also open this plugin here. We can see all of those plugins. We can also add plugins. If you click here, choose plugin and we can choose a plugin and efect plugin that we can use. And you can insert all of these plugins to all different tracks that you have in logic. Let's take a look at media effects. So as you can see here, we can't add mediafx to all the tracks. We can only add mediafix plugins to software instrument tracks. So here we have software instrument track, and we can add a media fiix if we want to. Can choose plug in here and we can add a media fiix right from this menu here. And we have to go to the media fix to be able to do that. Can also insert instruments to instrument channel strips. So you go to IO here and here you can see all of the software instrument that we have here. So here's the plug in, let's say, sampler here, sampler, and you can see all of the different instruments here. We can only add an instrument to a software instrument track. All right, so let's take a look at a plug in here. So if you go to AudioFx, you have all of the different Audiofx plugins here. So if you want to open a plugin in Logic Remote, you just go to, let's say, this overdrive plug in here and just tap it once here and we have this menu. We can open plug in here. We can also just open it right up without going to the menu by just double tapping here. So here we have this plug in open up. So as you can see, this plugin doesn't look exactly the same as our plugin in Logic Pro. So here you can see a comparison between how it looks on Logic Pro and how it looks on the Logic remote app. You can see all of the parameters are here, so you can see the drive here, you can see the output, and you can see the tone here as well. Let's say that you have another plugin that has a lot of parameters. So let's go with, for instance, let's see compressor. So we have a lot of different parameters here. But let's say that we have a plug in that has a lot of different parameters. So let's, for instance, take this pedal board here. You can see we have a lot of parameters. And if you want to see the other parameters, you just swipe between those like this. So if you're running Logic remote on an iPad Pro, you'll see the channel strip on the left side here. But because we're not running it on an iPad Pro, we have to go to the inspector here and now we can see the channel strip. And this view is pretty useful because you can disable and enable different plugins. You can also disable a plugin by just clicking here as well. So this is the same thing as in the channel strip, as you can see here. All right, so let's get back to our menu here. And if we go to the channel EQ, it looks a bit different. So as you can see, we have all of the different EQ curves here. And if you want to open up a channel EQ for a track, you can just double tap this curve. And then we will get the channel EQ plugin. So as you can see, the channel EQ plugin on a logic remote app is very good. It looks exactly the same as in Logic Pro, and you can use it with your fingers. So I think it's actually a lot more useful to use it with your fingers and with touch instead of with your mouse. So here you can just play around with all of different parameters, just like this. You can also double tap a point just to reset that so it goes back to zero. Yeah, so you can just play around a lot with this, and you can see. You can also tighten and widen it's here like this, and you can also make it wider. Yeah, there's a lot of different potential by doing this with touch instead of with your mouse. You can also see the analyzer of each EQ. So if you play the track here, then you can see that it's going to show us an analyzer on the EQ. So you can see a bar here as well. So you have the EQ curve here and you have a bar here as well. And this bar is for the compressor just as in logic. But if we double tap this, you will only have the parameters of the compressor, unfortunately, but you can still see how the compressor works. All right, so another useful feature for the logic remote tap is that we can copy and paste different plug ins just with one tab. So let's say that I have a channel EQ plugin here, I want to copy. So let's copy this over here and just tap this EQ plugin, press copy, and then I go to, let's say, an empty channel strip. So let's say that I want this for the closed hyatt here. I just go with an empty slot here and press paste. And now I have that EQ with the same parameters and same settings as we had in the previous one. So you're just duplicating these plugins with all of the different settings. So if you go back here, you can just let's say that you have a lot of different tracks that you want to have the same EKF. You can just hit a slot here, just go with paste, and then you will get that plug in that you copied earlier on. And also, if I want to move a plugin, I can do that as well. And I do it exactly the same way as in Logic Pro. So I just hold a plug in and I can just drag it to another channel strip here, just like this, very easy to do. As you can see, it's very easy to use, and you don't feel like you're using a remote app. It actually feels like you're using Logic Pro itself. Okay, guys, that is it for this video. In the next video, we're going to talk about automation in Logic Pro remote. 8. Automation in Logic Pro Remote App: Alright, so in this video, I'm going to show you automation in the Logic Pro remote App. So automation works a bit differently in Logic Pro remote versus the Logic Pro app. So I'm just going to show you how this works. So as you can see here, you have the automation button on each channel. So as you can see, it's green at the moment, and that means that it's on the read mode. So the automation reflects the automation mode that you have on your track on Logic Pro, of course. So let's say that we go to this track here, we select this track, and we also have it selected here in logic. And now if you go to automation here, you can see that this track, the baseball game Effex track that we have selected here, and we also have it selected in Logic Pro, that it's on the read mode. You can see here with the green text. So you can see Read green text, green button. So if you want to change the automation mode, you just click on the automation button, and let's say that we have it on off, right? So it's not on automation mode at all. Then you can see it's gray, and you also see that the text here is in white. So that means that it's off. So let's go back to read here. You can see it's green, and the text here is also green. Let's say that we want to touch. You can see orange, orange, and Logic Pro. Latch, you have even more orange, Latch. Then you have right, it's purple and you have purple in logic as well. So I'm going to go back to read here. Then you also have the trim and the relative modes. So if you choose one of these, you cannot see that it's active here in the Logic Pro remote app, but you can see it in Logic Pro. Okay, so let's try out and do some automation in the logic remote app. So let's just go to the pen and volume here. I'm going to automate the volume fader here just so you can see how it works. So we're going to use this track here, the baseball effects track. And yeah, let's put this to touch. And now I'm just going to do some movement here with the fader and just to record some automation. Joining compost, I'm a lot. I want any compost, I'm a lot I want any gate pen so now you can see it's automated and you can also see the automation in Logic Pro. So let's just go back to read here. So now it's just going to read the automation that we created and it's just going to read that, right? So if we would have it on touch, it will still override everything that we do on the fader. So you only do the touch mode whenever you want to do the automation, and then just go back to read mode. But everything on the automation modes is, of course, logic pro stuff. So if you want to learn more about automation in Logic Pro, I got a course on Logic Pro as well. And there I'm explaining everything about the automation modes in logic. Than that is exactly the same as in logic, but it works like this with the buttons here. Okay, so let's listen to it or mention that we did here. Dot com. Yeah. That's nice. Let's do some other automation here as well. So let's go with another track. So let's say that I want the base here to be a bit louder, so you can see it's automated here. So I'm just going to make it a bit louder and I'm going to just make it so it's going up here a bit. Yeah, let's do that. So we have the base track here enabled. I'm going to enable the touch mode here. And let's just play you don't have to record anything. You just hit Play and then do whatever automation you want to, you can fading or volume fader or anything else that you want to do in, let's say, an audio fix or something like that. So let's just play it, and let's see how it goes. These games are Jining. Do combo. Yeah, but I'm a lot, Matt, and he gave Bindi. I was just man. That's exactly what I wanted, so let's go back to read here, and let's listen to it again. These games are Jining. Do combo, but I'm a lot, M and he gave, bind That's great. So is that easy to create automations in Logic pro remote app? So as you can see, it's a lot easier to do it by hand with just your fingers. So yeah, that is a very good thing to have in the Logic Pro remote app. Okay, guys, that is it for this video. Hope to see you in the next one. 9. Chords Strips, Scaled and Modes: Okay, guys. So in this video, we're going to cover chord strips, scales and modes. I'm also going to show you how you can play with Midi on your iPad here. Okay, so first of all, I'm going to choose a track that has a software instrument to it. So let's see here, we have some tracks here. Okay, so let's say we want to use this track, right? So here we have the Chorus bells track, and I'm going to go here to the menu and go to Smart Controls and keyboard. So now you can see I have a piano here so I can play around with this instrument. The Logic Remote app is showing us a piano here because it's a melodic software instrument, but we can also use different views here. So if you go here and perform musing, you can see here we have on automatic, but we can choose different things here like fretboard, for instance. It's a bit strange because this is a guitar and this is not a guitar instrument. So yeah, but other than that, I would just go with automatic here and it's going to choose the right layout for this software instrument. So if you have the keyboard here, you can also do some different settings. So first of all, you can choose the size of the keys. So if you go here, you can see that we have different layouts. So if you want smaller keys, you can have it like that or even bigger keys. But I'm just going to choose the middle option here. You can also choose the octave. So if you go, let's say, minus one, we have the darker notes or if you want it to be plus one here, You can also tap on the middle here to reset it to zero. You can also have some sustain on the notes. So if we're just playing and holding the sustain button is just going to give us that. So let's play it. You can also swipe this sustain to the right to lock it on sustain and swipe it to the left to unlock it. So by default, we have a glissando layout of the keys here, so it works like this. You can also swipe this to the right here to get scroll. So now if I press a note and just do swipe it basically, so it's going to scroll the whole keyboard here. So let's try it. Then we have the pitch option as well. So here, if I hold a note and swipe it like this, it's going to pitch that sound up and down. Okay, so we can't really hear this, so I'm just going to change sound here. So there you can hear it. I'm going to use the Gisando. We can also lock the keyboard to some different scales here, and that makes us very easy to create different chords. So if you go to scale here, let's choose Major, for instance, and now I can just play something here. Let's do some other sounds. I can also do some different scales here. So let's do something like minor blues, for instance. That's very cool. We also have an arpeggiator option. So if I press arpeggiator here, you can also see that the sustain button has now become latch. So since we now have the arpeggiator option enable here, we're also going to add an arpeggiator media effects for this track. So if you go back to the mixer here, let's go with media effect. And now you can see our track has an arpeggiator plugin. So let's duplicate that one, and now you can see a lot of different parameters here that you can change for the arpeggiator. So if you want some, let's say, faster rate or no, do slower rate, for instance. Now let's go back to our Smart Controls and keyboard. You can hear that the rate is a lot slower. So as soon as we enabled our Pegator mode, it also creates a media fix plug in for this. So we can go back to the mixer here, find our peggiator plug in for this track, duplicate it, and now you can see all of the parameters and steer it from here. Okay, so let's take a look at Cord strips, and this is a very cool and easy way to create chord progressions very easily. So if you go to the menu here and press Cord strips, now you can see we have a lot of different patterns. We have rows here, and each one has three lower buttons here and four upper buttons here. So these ones are yeah, you can call it base nodes, and these ones are the higher nodes. All right, so now we have the arpeggiator on. I don't want that, so I'm going to go back to the mixer here. We're just going to disable this or actually remove it, and then we're going to use a different, different track for this. Let's go with this glass piano maybe. Let's try this first. Smart Controls and keyboard. That's a horrible track to create chords out of. So let's look for different let's see a different track. Maybe vibe piano. Oh, yeah, that's a real piano. Kind of cool sounding piano. Okay, so let's try the chord strips for this one. So you can see you have a lot of different d frations going on in each node. And these are just pitch up and down, and for all of the different nodes, you have each column here. And you also have that sustain control here. So if we swipe this, right? God that gives us that stain. Okay, so as you can see, we have set nodes here for the chords, and you can also change this. So if we go to settings here and go to edit Cords, now you can change all of the chords here for every single column. So let's do this one, right? So I want to choose F minor, for instance. Let's do that. And now we have an F minor here. So this is a very cool way to create core preens. So if I want to do, let's say, I want to do some minor chords here, right? So I'm just going to choose minor here, C minor G, okay? Yeah, let's do that. Yeah, very cool way to get creative with corporations. And let's say that you've made a mistake here. Let's go back to Eddie Chords and just hit revert. You can always revert back to the original settings here. So revert done, and now we're back to what we had originally. Okay, guys, that is it for this video. In the next video, we're going to talk about guitar and strings instruments. So let's see you in that one. 10. Guitar and Strings Instruments - Part 1: Okay. So in Logic Pro remote, you also have different touch instruments. So I showed you the piano touch instruments that we can play around with the piano in the app, but you also have guitar, bass and strings instruments, touch instruments as well. So I'm going to show you these instruments. So first of all, let's create a new software instrument track that I have here and I'm going to choose guitar, and I'm going to choose just a random guitar here. So let's go for acoustic guitar. Okay, so now we can see the acoustic guitar here in Logic Pro remote. So if you go to the menu here, you can now see that we can choose the view here of Smart Controls and fretboard. So this is suited for the guitar instrument, right? And this is because I have the perform using on automatic, and now Logic Remote is going to choose the right view setting for us. So if you go to Smart Controls and fretboard here, then you can see that we have this acoustic guitar interface here. So now I can play around here, just like on a real guitar, basically. Yeah, that wasn't, like, my best performance, right? But this is a guitar. So yeah, it's very cool to use just as a regular, like, real guitar. But I can also just, like, tap different strings here. So And the strings are responsive to velocity as well, so. So if I hammer this here, it's going to play very loudly as well or with higher velocity. And I can also bend the strings. So, and I'm not breaking them just like if I would play on a real guitar right. So You can also change scales here. So if you go to scale, then you can choose, let's say, major here. And now you can see there's some notes here, and it now shows note bars instead of frets. But we can also go to the chord strips here. And this is a very nice feature as well for the guitar. So let's try it here. And just as you can do with the piano, you can also change the chord. So if you go to the settings, edit chords, and now I can choose the right chord for each strip here. So you just select the strip, choose the chord, so I can change the chord here. And now it's going to be the right chord here. So if you want to play a chord progression, for instance, this is very good to use as well. And the best thing here is that you can play a real chord like this. M You can also press on the chord here to get the full chord being played. You can also mute the chord being played but just tapping on the left side here. Or just holding it to, yeah, just like an unreal guitar, muted. There's also an electrical guitar instrument, touch instrument, and it works the same way, but it looks a bit different. So if we go to the instruments here, so if you choose the classic clean here, for instance, now we have the electrical guitar. Let's go with off here. Let's go with chord strips. Same thing there. And it works the same way as the acoustic guitar. It just looks a bit different, so it looks like the right guitar type. And here you can see the interface for the guitar bass. So it looks a bit different, same thing here, but you can only see four strings here. So that is because it's replicating a real acoustic base. So that is why it does that. But other than that, works the same way as the other guitar instruments and guitar touch instruments. But it works a bit differently when we go to the chord strips here. So let's go to the chord strips. And now you can see we have the chords, but a bass, usually you don't do chords. So if you press the chord button here on top of each chord, then it's not going to play a chord, as you can see. But you can play separate notes oven. Mm hmm. And this is handy because you can play everything in the right chord, of course. And you can play different notes at the same time if you do this, just as with other instruments. But as I said before, you can't play the full chord if you press the button here, and this is because it's acoustic base, so that's why it doesn't work like that. Let's choose an upright studio base here. So I just chose the coffee shop Monstera preset here. And if you go back to the Smart Controls and fretboard, you can now see that we don't have any frets here. So yeah, but it just works the same way. Or It just emulates a real instruments, and that is why it's so cool to just play along with the different instruments here in the Logic remote app. So let's choose the smart strings preset here, and you can find this if you go to orchestral, click that and go with strings, and then we have smart strings here. So now you can see a bit of a different interface here, so I'm just going to go back to the Smart Controls first. And here you can also see that we have a fretboard just as we had with the guitars. So if we just played here, it's going to be the same thing as with the guitar instruments. But you can't really bend the strings here. But you can do this. So you can play around with pitch like that as well. And you can, of course, choose different notes being played here. So if you go to scale, let's go with major here. And now we're playing in a major scale. You can also simulate a Boeing action here if you go to the left side, and let's play a note. And I'm going to drag this note up and down like this at the same time as I'm holding here. So let's try that. H And let's play around with the scale here as well. So if we just play around with the different scales, let's go with a different scale for now. And let's just press it like this sideways. 11. Guitar and Strings Instruments - Part 2: Okay, well, if we go to the chord strips here, now you can play around with different strings instruments here in a very cool way. So if we just press and hold one of the chords here on the upper section here. So if we just hold it and then do the swipe up and down, then we're going to do a very nice Boeing simulation here as well. Very dramatic. But if you tap one of those notes here, you're going to play it in staccato. So let's try that as well. And, of course, everything here is a chord. So if I just press one of the notes here, and then it's going to be achord depending on what corporation we're using or what scale here, and what node of the scale as well. And as you might have noticed here, you can see that we have a lot of different instruments or it's actually string instruments, of course, but they all are here. So you can see first violins, second violins, violas, cellos and basses. And all of those are lighted up right now. So that means that we're playing everything together as of now. We can also choose to, like, disable one instrument or several instruments or enable them. So if you go to this section here and just press it like that, now it's going to be playing just the first and the second violins and violas, as well. Let's say that we only want the Ss and the bases being played. Now let's disable these ones and enable that ones. Now you have that kind of dramatic but lower end notes to them, right, because it's only playing the ss and the bases. So very cool thing, and it works with the smart strings for the Logic remote app. Okay, so in the next video, we're going to talk about drum pads in Logic remote App. See you in the next video. 12. Drum Pads in Logic Pro Remote - Part 1: Okay, so if you're playing a lot of different drum sections and drum instruments in Logic Pro, then if you're only doing this with your medi keyboard or even just with your mouse and just going with the piano roll, then you have a lot better alternatives and solutions here with the Logic remote app. And you have that with a drum touch instruments in Logic remote app. So for the electronic drum kit, you will have a drum pads for each instrument. So let's just show that for now. So I'm just going to go back to the instruments here. And I'm going to choose drum kits, or actually, let's go with the electronic drum kit for now. And let's choose something here. I'm just going to choose one of those. And let's go to the Smart Controls and drum pads. So now you can see we have a lot of different pads here. You can also choose different instruments. And if you have other pads here, you can also scroll like that. But you can also see full drum kits. So by that, I mean, like, real drums. So if you go to drum kit here, let's choos a drum kit. And now you can see this, but if you go to drum kit here now, you can see you have the full drum kit. So you can actually play just as if you would play like a real drum kit. So h. Yeah, that was my very improvised, but very well played, of course, drum performance. So yeah, but that is what the drum kits does as well. So everything here is going to change and that depends on the patch or preset that you have set for your track. Okay, so let's go back to our electronic drum kit for now. So an electronic drum kit, I'm just going to choose a random one here, or let's choose a different one. Yeah, let's choose this one, right? So now you can see we have only pads here, right? And this is because we were into the drum kit section. And this is the same thing as the drum pads section if you're on electronic drum kit. But we're going to go back to the smart controls and drum pads for now. So here you have smart controls on the upper side, and then you have drum pads on the lower side here. So if you only want to play around with the drum pads, you will have to go back to the drum pads here, and now you only have drum pads. But let's focus now on the smart controls. And as I showed you before, you have your drum pads here, but you can also find the other drum pads. So if you're just scrolling here like this, then you will find other instruments in this electronic drum kit. And on the upper side here, you have just your smart controls here so you can play around with different things like high tone, low tone, drive and crush. For instance, so we have the high hat or the kick maybe. So you can choose higher tone. Or let's say we want some more drive to the kick drum. You have to, of course, enable it, or maybe we want some crush to it. So you can just play around with all of these different parameters. Let's go back to the drum pads here for now. And now we're back in the pad section. So just as I showed you before, if you just play it, it's going to play that sound. But we also have this velocity sensitive. So if I press this very, like, light, then it's just going to be low volume, basically. And then if you hit it harder and harder, then it's going to be louder. So it just mimics, like, a real electronic drum kit with the pads. But there are some other cool things here in the pad sections instead of just tapping the different pads. So let's start with the first one here. If I just press and hold with two fingers, then it's going to loop that sound. We can also choose the velocity of that looped sound if we drag it up and down. And you've also seen these two buttons. So the first one here is Norepet. So now you can see that we have different modes for the notes to repeat. We also have a window being shown here in logic, which is called Norepet. So this is the same thing here as we have here. But you can also choose this button here, this arrow, and then you have a lot of different options here. So you can also do aftertouch, modulation wheel, pitch band, and other stuff like that. You can also go to key remote here to, like, connect an external midi keyboard to simulate these buttons here that we do on the iPad. So as we have the iPad now and the logic remote app, we don't have to do that. But if you wouldn't have the iPad, you can connect a mini interface like this, and then you can see here that we have this note here being the one 16th, for instance, so it's going to be the same thing as we have here. But what this note repeat does is that it's going to repeat our note, basically, but it's going to do it with the timing that we set here. And so on and so forth. Okay, so let's put this to practice. So we're going to record a short beat with the drum pads. So I'm going to put the metronomon of course, and I'm going to just record it and show you how you can do this. So let's start with a kick and a snare. The So that is very improvised thing here and just playing around, basically. And you can do this way better if you just, like, concentrate more than me. But yeah, of course, you can play around with a lot of different things, as you can see. So you can play with different instruments. You can do them separately first, and then continue on with the next one, next one, the next one, or you can do, yeah, you can do whatever you want, basically. You can press three and then maybe three instruments or three pads at the same time and then go back to one more and one more and one more and add up like that. And we also have one more thing here. So we have the spot eras button here. So if you press this one here, now what it's going to do is that it's going to erase whatever that we're playing here. So let's say that I done, I made a perk here, right? So I made a percussion sound the percussion sound one, I think it was. And that didn't sound too good, in my opinion, so I'm just going to try and erase it. So let's go and do that. So let's just play it and let's see. So that is a spot eraser feature here. And as you can see, I was just on a play mode here, so I didn't have to press the record button, and that is because we already have recorded data there. So you don't have to record anything. You just press the play and then choose what you want to delete with a spot eraser feature. 13. Drum Pads in Logic Pro Remote - Part 2: Right, so for the next one, we're going to take a look at the drum kit. Let's go back to our instrument picker here and drum kit, and I'm just going to choose a drum kit. So now we have a full drum kit here and you can see that if you go to the drum kit here as well. And if you go to the Smart Controls and drum pads, this is the exact same thing as we had with the electronic drum kit. So you have drum pads here where it's the same thing, but just with, like, a real drum set. And then we have different EQ and mix compression, whatever they set for these instruments here. So let's go back to the drum kit view here. And as I showed you before, this is for performance. So I try to play something here, and it almost was as I was a percussionist or something like that. But I'm not. But you also have different things here that you can do. So just as with the real drum set, you have your snare drum here. But if you play it here, you will have a rim shot. And if you play it very hard, you have that kind of hard play at snare as well. So you have different sounds depending on where you hit the sound or that drum section. So let's say for the hyat here, then you have an open and closed hyat depending on where you press. So here we have a closed hyatt, right? And if you play it on the left side, you will have an open hyat. And then you also have the symbol. So if you press with one finger here, that will trigger the symbol and the kick drum. So just as you can see there, but if you want to just play the symbol, you have to tap that with two fingers. Yeah, sometimes my fingers are maybe way off or something, but you really have to hit the symbol with two fingers to get the symbol only here. You can also trigger the notrept just as we had in the drum pad section. So same thing here, hold it with two fingers. But as you can see, it only works on the drums here or in the Toms. So it works on these drums here. Also works on the symbol. And you also have more kind of realistic or not realistic movements. So if you just do something with their fingers air, you will see what I mean. So nothing going on here, but Yeah, so the snare section is you can play along a lot with it. And as Apple said, this is a realistic drum kit. So, of course, if I hit the kick drum here, you will see the toms here being moved. That's the small things that Apple really put the details on here. Okay, guys, so that is it for this video. In the next video, we're going to take a look at live loops in Logic remote. 14. Live Loops - Part 1: Okay, so for this video, we're going to take a look at Live loops in Logic Remote app. So here you can see, we're going to create a new project in Logic Pro first. So we have to go to the computer to choose a project. So if you go to new project and then go to Live oops Grids, then you will have a different set of presets here made from artists here or made from Apple here as well. But I'm just going to choose the HardwllO here. It's a very nice DJ that I usually listen to myself. So I think I'm going to notice the sounds here. Let's go with choose. And now you can see it's loading all of the sounds here and it's going to show us the live loops on Logic Pro on our Mac here, and it's also going to do the same thing here on our iPad. And what is live loops? With live loops, you can play and arrange your musical ideas in a grid here, as you can see. And you can do that in real time, as well. And all of your sounds here are in one of these cells here. So if you stop one cell or play another cell, it's all going to be sync. So it's being played in sync. If you're familiar with Ableton Live, I think you're going to be feeling at home here when we're doing live loops in Logic Pro. And live loops in Logic Pro is a very major thing. So I got a full course on that one as well. So Logic Pro, working with live loops. But let's take a look at live loops for Logic remotap in this video. So as you can see here, we have all of our live loops. And if you go to the Show Hide Tracks area, then you can see we don't have anything arranged yet. So this is empty song, empty project here, but we still have all of these sounds as live loops. So if you don't have this view here, you just go to the menu here and go to live loops to have this view. So with live loops, you have different columns and different rows. So each row is one track. So if you put this track here, then you have a clap. You also have this one. We have Shaker. You can see that on Logic Pro, and you also have different columns here as well. And each column here is called a scene. Each scene has its own set of sounds, basically. So if I want to see the track names and other details of each track here, then I just have to swipe like this. And now I can see the names of each tracks, and I can also mute solo and record. Can also do some volume levels here as well. Okay? So then you also have the track controls here on the right side, and this one indicates if it's the cell being played with the live loops or the regions for the arrangement in Logic Pro. Trigger a cell by just tapping on it like this and just stopping it by tapping it again. And as you can see, it's going to be playing, and it's not going to end immediately. It's going to end at the next bar. Let's just play a scene now. So I'm going to press one of these scene buttons, and then we're going to stop the scene by just tapping on the stop scene button here. Alright, so you can see there that we just played a scene, and then we just stop the scene, basically. Okay, so now let's go to the more interesting things here in live loops. So if you go to the edit scene here, Edit scene button, all these cells here are now kind of grade out. So if you press one to select them, and then just press it again, we have this edit menu here, and you have a lot of different options here with the edit menu. And as you can see, you have loops, record, C, repeat, and delete. Then you also have edit quantize, playback, and settings which all have their own sub menus to them. So if you go to Edit, for instance, then you have cut, copy, rename, and let's go back here quantize. Then you have a lot of different quantize options, playback, then you have a lot of different playback options, basically, and same thing with setting. So you have a lot of different things that you can do for just this cell. So if you put this menu up again, if you press on record here, then it's going to record in the same way as it does with regions in Logic Pro. You can even do multiple takes, for instance, if you want to do that. So if you hit record here, then it's going to record more takes on this region or in this case, cell. But I'm not going to go into detail for every option here in this menu because that will be full course, I think. It's a lot of things going on here in the live loops. But it's basically doing the same things as we have for the regions in Logic Pro. So it's similar, but it's in a different kind of way here because we have a different view and it works a bit differently. You can also hit one of these scene buttons here. So let's hit the scene button here, and then you also have a menu for the whole scene. You can also press a very handy feature here, very handy button, the key commands button here, and then you will have different key commands that logic things will be the most a helpful thing for you to have right now. But this is only showing if you're in the edit mode here. So if you go out here, we also go out of the edit mode and go back here, then you can see we have the quanti start menus here, and you also have the loop indicator here and the enable performance recording button here. Okay, so these quanti start values that you set here are global for Logic Pro. So you can set individual quanti start values by each cell or by the whole scene. And the quanti start value is determining when it's going to be start and being stopped. By this, I mean that the playback starts in a musical, kind of logical way, right? So it doesn't start immediately when you press play. I have to wait for the quantize start and then it's going to start. And the same thing if you tap it again, that's not going to stop immediately, it's going to wait for the quantize kind of value that you set here. So that is why it doesn't stop or doesn't play immediately when you tap it when you play along, live with it, right? So if you play a full scene, then it's going to be playing then it's going to stop when it makes musically most sense. So I can just show you that very quickly here. If we set this to one, then we play one of these scenes. So I don't know if you can see there, but as soon as I stopped one of these cells here, then it didn't stop it immediately. I waited for the quanti here that we have on one, then it stopped it. So if we press something shorter like this, and let's play the scene again. Then that was a lot shorter time, right? So if we press something three, So, as you can see, that was longer. And the same thing goes with playing. So if I press again the scene and I just have one track stopped, so let's go back to one here, and then we want to play it like in the middle of a section or something like that, then it's going to wait for the next bar or the next as we have set here, one. So let's try that. So you can see that with the indicator here as well. So the indicator is showing when it's going to start as you tap it, right? So if you tap it in the middle of the progress here, then it's going to wait until it's full and then it's going to play it. Same thing goes with stop. But if this is longer, then this indicator is going to take longer time. So yeah, that is how you do this, right? And that is the most important thing in live loop. 15. Live Loops - Part 2: Can also different cells. So let's say that we have one cell here in this scene, one cell here and one cell maybe here. So I want to queue them so they would play together. I can do that if we go to edit mode here, and now I just have to select this one, press Q. So now you can see it's kind of blinking. Same thing here, Q, and same thing here, Q. So now if I go out of the edit mode here, it's going to blink, as you can see, because they are now cued. So if I press play here, then it's going to be playing just these cells. And now we have to deselect DQ. Let's see DQ and DQ. As you might have noticed here, all of these cells are looping all the time, right? So they're playing and they're playing back in and back in and back again. But we can also turn off looping for some cells if we want to. So let's say that I have this maybe this ride section here that I only want to be played once in this scene, and then it's going to be stopped. While all of the other cells are going to still be looping. So how I do that is that I go to the edit mode here and press and select. Then if you go to the playback menu here, you can see the loop is enabled, so we can just disable that, press done. And now we can play this scene here, and this is going to be played once and then it's going to be stopped while all of the other cells are still going to be looped. So we have to go out of the edit mode and now play. Okay, so now we're going to take a look at how you record to a logic region from the live loops, and this is where this performance recording button is going to be used. So we have to have this top bar enabled here and now we just hit this button here. And also, we have to make sure that the cycle mode is off here and now just hit the record button. B, punt punt punt punt punt, but, punt punt punt punt punt punt punt punt punt punt bus punt punt punt punt punt bus bus punt punt puns, punt punt punt, p p, p, p p. Alt, Aleftn left terms left turns, a left turn. A left n, left turn, a left turn. Okay, so as you can see, you can play along with a lot of different things here, and, yeah, it's a very creative way to create new sounds and new combination of sounds and also play live with it as well because this is live loops. Okay, guys, that is it for this video. In the next video, we're going to take a look at Remix Effexs in Logic Remote app. 16. Remix FX - Recording & Live - Part 1: Okay, so in this video, we're going to take a look at remix effects. And this is one of the biggest features of Logic Remote app. You can also find this remix effects as a plugin in Logic Pro. So if you go to the inspector here and let's add an effect plugin, and I'm going to go with multi effects and remix effect. So here you have the plug in of the logic remote feature here. But all of these features here are done with the mouse when you're using it with Logic Pro. And here, with Logic Remote on the iPad, you're going to use your fingers. I'm going to show you why that makes a lot of sense, more sense than using the mouse and why it's so useful and helpful with your projects. You can find this if you go to Effex button here, and now you can see the remix effects. And as you can see, you have an XY pad here, and each of them are controlling different things. So here you can see we have the first one here on the left side on filter, and the one on the right side here, we have it on repeater. And as you can see, we have this on the live loops now, but you can also go to, let's say, the mixer here, put the effxs and now you can use it with the mixer as well. So it's not tied to the live loops at all. You can use it with different scenarios here, but we're going to use it for live loops for now. But if you look at the Logic Pro instruction manual, then you can see that remix effect was built for live loops. So we're going to use it for live loops in this tutorial. All right, so let's open up the remix effects if we go to the fx button here. So as I said before, we have this left one selected on filter and the right one selected on the repeat. But we can change that. So let's say that I want something else then filter here. I just press the filter button, and now I have different settings here. So I can choose six different affixes for this XY pad here. So let's say that I want to choose wobble for this one, and let's go with this one here and let's say that I want to choose wobble here as well. I can't do that. So you can see it switched back to repeater here. So you can't have the same effect on both sides because it doesn't make any sense to have it. But other than that, you can choose whatever effect you want here. You can see each parameter on each effect here. So you can see cutoff is on this side, so if it goes sideways, and resonance is if it go up and down. Same thing goes with reverb here. For instance, mix is up and down and time is left and right like this so sideways, and everything here is set depending on what effect you're using. Repeater is going to have something else, of course, orbit, for instance, depth rate. You have this set on XY axis here, you have to look for the parameters that are set here for each effect. Let's try this. I'm just going to use filter for now, and let's try one of these scenes here. Alert. Alert alert alert alert alarm down, alarm down, alert alert alert alert alert. So as you can see here, I can also lock whatever I do here. So let's say that I want to do some filtering with the effects here, then I can just swipe it with the finger, and as long as I hold my finger in this area here, then it's going to do the effet. But as soon as I take away my finger, then the effect stops. But if I have the lock button on, then it's going to be basically locked on wherever I left my finger. So if I just do something like this, then it's going to stop, right? So if I have this unlocked, and now it's going to lock this position where I were with my finger, the last position, basically. And I can also unlock that. And with this button here, it's going to be always set to the default position here. Then you also have this reset button. So let's say that I go back to the filter here, I lock this one, and I'm just going to play it, right? So let's play it. So it actually just resets whatever you have here and you can do that in real time instead of just having to look for the middle position and then go back and unlock it, right? So that is why you have the reset button here. Then you have a gator here, so this is going to make a kind of stattering sound. So let's try that as well. Then you have something here on the right hand side, and this is the down sampler, and this is something like kind of bit crushing, something like distortion kind of plug in. Let's try that out as well. Kind of cool effects here. 17. Remix FX - Recording & Live - Part 2: Also, of course, combine these here. So let's do that. Oh So this is a huge benefit when you're using multi touch kind of interface here instead of doing this by hand with your mouse, there is, this one is actually going to be impossible to do with your mouse. So here is where the iPad shines when it comes to Logic Pro. Okay, so then we have three buttons here. The first one is reverse. The second one is scratch button, and the next one is a tape stop button. And for each button, you have different settings depending on what side of the button you press. So let's just play, and let's just see what happens here. Hello, hello. He. Alert. Hello. Hello. Hello. Left left Aleve. We also have a settings button here. So if you press the settings button, you can see we have different modes here now. So we have filter mode, and we have orbit mode here. So depending on what effect you have set on each side, you will have different modes here. Same thing goes. If you, for instance, press the Gator button here, then you will have different settings here and same thing with the bit crusher. So you can see you have different settings for that one. But you have to press it to get that setting. And if you press one of these buttons here, you will have the motivations here for these three buttons. So if we press one of the buttons here, you will have the time here. So if you want, like, a faster effect for the left side, as you can see here, if you press that one, that will be for the right side. So you can see you have each one selected here and each one will have their own setting. All right, so now I want to show you how you can record all of these effects here. So let's say that I want to produce music with this, and I want to make settings here so we can record them. So not just recording the track, but also recording the different effects that we do with effect plug in here. So first of all, you need to have regions here, so you need to create a track because this is now in live loops mode. So first, I'm going to record these tracks here, play along a bit with live loops. And then after that, we're going to do one more recording with fixes. So I'm going to show you how to do that. So first of all, let's record our song here. So I'm just going to hit record and just play. He, love, love, love, love, love, those alert alert, those alert. 11. Okay, so now we have a very, very short region here. So I just created very simple audio here. If you want to see how to create a song from the live loops, you have to watch the previous video where I show you how to do that. But for this one, I'm just going to do a very, very short short recording just to show you how to record affixes. So first of all, we're going to automate these affixes. And to automate this in logic, we need to have a plugin so we can automate something, right? So as you can see here in logic, when we do the effexs, what happens in Logic Pro is that it's creating us an plug in here as you can see in the stereo out channel. So the stereo out channel is basically for everything that comes out from logic sound wise, and then we have this plug in set here. So this plugin is the same thing as you can see here. It's controlling what we're doing here on the Logic remote app. So we want to automate this, and to be able to automate this, we need to have something in the arrangement here. So we have a region now. So I'm just going to play that. I'm just going to go out of live loops here. And now I want to hit this button here. So we have it as a region. So you can see here it's either live loop or a region. So now it's a region. So if I play this, it's going to play the exact same thing as we recorded earlier on. And to be able to record automation here, we need to create a track for the stereo output channel here. So you can see we have the stereo channel. If you just right click on the stereo channel and show output track. So now we have the stereo out channel here. So now we can automate whatever's going on here or any other channel, right? So now we just hit the record button or we can actually hit the play button as well and just record automation. But to do that, we need to go back here and go to stereo, and we need to press automation button and touch. So now it's going to record all of our automation here. So I'm going to put this in cycle mode here and just play FX, play, and just play along here, and we will see what happens. Alright, so let's see how that went. And I'm going to press A here for automation. And now you can see we have different automation curves here in Logic Pro. So you can see we have effXs filter cutoff, filter resonance. So we have all of these different parameters that we did on the iPad, and now we have it automated here in Logic Pro. So now if you play this, you will hear all of our effects, you can also see that on the remix ex plugin. So let's do that. Alright, guys. That was it for this video. In the next video, we're going to talk about step sequencer in logic remote. 18. The Step Sequencer: Alright, guys. So in this video, we're going to talk about the step sequencer in logic remote app. The step sequencer offers a classic drum machine interface in Logic Pro. And of course, everything is mirrored from Logic Pro to our logic remote app. So it's also here on our logic remote app. And it's a very nice thing to use your fingers here. I'm just going to show you everything how you can use it. We're not going to go very in depth in the step sequencer tutorial here because there's a lot of things going on here, but I'm going to show you the essential things that you need to know for the step sequencer, for the logic remote. Alright, so as you can see, we have the drum machine designer plug in loaded here in Logic Pro. So let's just open that up. We have this tough kits here, which you can, of course, change to something else. We have a lot of different drum kits here. But we have this for now. So to find this step sequencer view on the Logic remote. Need to go to the menu here and you can see step sequencer. And this is only going to be enabled when you have a track that has step sequencer. So for this one, we have it and it's enabled here and you can choose that. So you have each row here, which corresponds to each instrument that you have in the drum machine. You can also expand each instrument, and you can see here that you have velocity, repeat, note, and octave. You can also do that in the step sequencer. So not only use it for playback of this sound here, you can also do different things like takeaway velocity or repeat or other things like that as well. You can also take away different things. You can delete, let's say we don't want the velocity, let's just hit on there. You can also add different parameters here. Let's add one and you can see it's on velocity now because it was deleted. But we can also just click here and choose other different things that we want to have in the step sequencer for this sound. We can choose loop, for instance, then you have that as well for the step sequencer. You can also preview the step sequencer if you just play it here. You can see we have a very short sound now. Let's just do something. Here. Let's do something like this. Whoops, like that. Yeah. And so let's say that our step sequencer is longer than only these 4 bars here. Then you will have a different set of notes here. So if we go back here to this region, you can see our step sequence here in logic. Let's just make that smaller. So I'm going to just do something like this. So if you want this to be longer, you can just go to 32 steps here, and now you can see we have two different sections here. So if we browse that, it can do like this. So let's say that we want 64 steps maybe. So now we have four different sections here. We can choose between. You can also choose what each of these steps are doing here. So if you go here, you can see on off. You can also see velocity value. We can choose something else here. So if you have it set to on off, it's just going to just basically play that note. If you want to set it something else, we have to go here and set it something else, and now it's selected here, as you can see. So now it's set on velocity value. We can also do loop or something like that. So And by the way, as you could see, I just made the pattern length like 64 steps instead of initial 16 steps that we had in Logic Pro. So I went to Logic Pro to do that. But you can also do that on the Logic Remote app, of course. So if you go to the ibton here, then you can see pattern length. So that is the same thing as we had in Logic Pro. So now we can change the pattern length here if you want to. We can also do other different stuff. So let's say step rate. So we'll have much more finer grid here if you do something like 32, for instance, you can do a lot of things here as well. And you can also do step sequencer for other instruments. So it's not just for beats and drums and stuff like that. You can also do that for, let's say, melodic instruments. So if you go back to logic here, I'm just going to create a new software instrument. And I'm going to add, let's say, a piano, right? So I just want to concert grand piano. So now we have that track here. And now you can also see in the step sequencer. So if you just choose step sequencer, of course, then you can see that we have notes here instead of different sounds that we had earlier on. So I can just play it like this if I want to, and now it's going to play it in different notes. You can see the notes here. Okay, so that was everything, but I can also just preview this one here. Yeah, sounds almost great. A, I guess, that was it for this video. In the next video, we're going to look at Smart Controls. See you there. 19. Smart Controls: Okay, so in this video, we're going to talk briefly about the smart controls in logic remote. So as you might know here, you have different knobs and different settings for the smart controls. So a smart control is where you can change a parameter, for instance, of, let's say, a plugin or a sound or something like that. And that can be set up different variables and different parameters at the same time. So let's say that we have the threshold here. That can be two or three different settings in a plugin being changed at the same time. But this is something that the developers of Logic Pro has came up with. So if we choose, let's say that we go to the mixer here, and we want to let's let's do the guitar, for instance, here, and we go to Smart Controls, and now we have different settings for what is on the mixer for that channel. So if we go back to the mixer here and let's just go to the audio effects, you can see you have the tremolo on here. But let's say that we have an instrument, so we want to find an instrument here. So a synth, for instance. Okay, so we don't have any in this track. So let's create a new one here. So I'm just going to create a new track. So let's say that we want a new track. So let's go here, New Track. We want a new software instrument track. So now we have that here. We have an electric piano, and we want to see the smart controls of this electric piano, right? So if you go here, smart controls and keyboard, now we have the smart controls for this synth or this software instrument, plug in. So now we have different set settings for this one. So you can also get smart controls with different third party plugins, as well, but those are not defined by Logic Pro at all. So that means that you will get like, very basic settings and stuff like that. So yeah, I'm not going to go in depth with smart controls in this video here, but I'm just going to show you that it just mimics whatever is shown in Logic Pro, of course, just like everything else. But what is cool with this one here is that you can steer these knobs with your fingers, and it's a lot better than doing this in logic with your mouse, of course, because I do smart controls on Logic Pro on my Mac, I don't use it at all. I just find it kind of annoying to be honest. And I just close that immediately. But hearing Logic Remote app is a different story because you can see it. It feels like more of like a real Synth, right? So that is something that is very, very cool to use. And for this Syth here or for this plug in here, we have this set of smart controls. So let's just change it. I'm just going to do it here on my MAC so let's go with something else, synthesizer. Let's go with a retrosynth for instance. So now it looks a bit different because this is the retrosynth plugin and it's just it looks differently, right? And it has different settings. So I have the cutoff here. You can see if I do it with a knob here, it's going to do the same thing with the curvier. So it's a lot easier to just do it with a knob than scroll around here with this one or this setting here. So let's say resonance, you have that one, of course, and you can do that, as you can see together. So yeah, it's a very cool thing to do. You can also choose the different parameters for Smart control. You can only do that in Logic Pro. If I just click the B button here on my keyboard, I will get this interface. So here you can see the Smart Control. It's going to show the same thing here as on our iPad. You can, of course, change these parameters. So if you go here, you can see you have all of the different parameters for this track here. And yeah, external assignment, you can do a lot of things here, cut off let's say we want this one, then it's going to be something else. You can also press the learn button here and do something in the plug in, and it's going to be controlled by this knob here. And as I told you before, these ones are exclusive for logic software sins, but it's only for the Logic Remote app, right? So if you're just working on Logic Pro, then you can actually create your own smart controls in Logic Pro, as I showed you. Good thing here is that if you create your own smart controls in Logic Pro, it's going to show up on the logic Remote app as well. So if you're creating your own kind of smart controls and different settings and parameters like your own knobs, then it's going to show up in logic remote as well, but it's not going you can't create anything on Logic remote. You have to do it in Logic Pro. Sometimes when you do your own knobs, let's say you do your own smart controls in Logic Pro, it's not showing up in logic remote, so you have to refresh it. You have to actually go just like the chord strips or live loop, something like that, and then go back to the Smart Controls, and then it's going to give you that refresh layout if you create your own smart controls. You can also use Smart Controls for audio effect. So let's go back to our mixer here. Tonight, if I choose, let's say, I choose this guitar layer here and now I go to Smart Controls, I can see the different settings for the plugins that we have there. 20. Smart Controls Explained: Okay, so, in this video, we're going to look a bit more into the smart controls of Logic Pro and logic remote. So the Smart Controls is a very popular feature in Logic Pro, because you can use a lot of different parameters with just some knobs. But with the Logic Remote app, you can actually do that by hand. So it's a lot easier to do this when performing live, for instance, or also if you want to do production, music production, and you want to do automation and stuff like that, and have that kind of hand feeling when you do this with your fingers, right? So it feels like a real synth or a real instrument. Let's take a look at some more practical uses of the smart controls. So let's go to the mixer section here. So let's go to, for instance, a software instrument track. And now we go to our Smart Controls and keyboard. Now you have the smart controls and you have the keyboard as well. And this is always the case with software instruments. So it's going to show you the smart controls here and also the keyboard here as well. So let's say that I want to do some movement to our synth here, and I want to automate the cutoff and maybe something else here as well. So if you play that's very like a simple sound. But I want to automate some movement, so So let's do that. We want to record automation, so we go back to our mixer here. So we want this to be set into touch mode. And let's go back to our smart controls. And now let's hit the record button. I'm also going to do cycle mode. And let's also put the metronome on here so we can hear what we're doing. So let's record. Okay, let's take a look at the automation now. And if you go to automation here, you can see let's create automation here. You can see we have our parameters, so cut off here. That was created on this knob here, and then we have the resonance as well. Very cool to do this all by just doing it with the iPad, right? So yeah, that is a very nice thing to use the smart controls on the Logic remote app for. And one more really cool thing that I want to show you regarding the smart controls is that if we put the Alchemy plug in here, so you can see we have this plug in here. And this is also a logic pro plugin. It's a very nice plug in and I love this plugin. But here we have something called transform pad. So when we're playing something, we can just swipe it through here to get different parts of this transformation kind of thing. So instead of the knobs, we have something like swiping, and that is controlling a lot of different parameters for us. So let's just play it and let's just see what happens here. So there's actually a really cool way and really creative way as well to create a new sound. And you can also blend different effects together as I did here, for instance. And yeah, you can just play around with it. Very cool way to be kind of creative here with this plug in. But that is not all with the Altimin plugin. You also have different parameters for the smart controls. So you have pages here, as you can see you have an arrow here, and then you have the next page. You can also swipe with two fingers like that to get that. And you also have XY pads here. So yeah, there's a lot of things going on with the smart controls for this. Plug in, and this is the only plug in that I've seen so far that has a lot of different kind of creative ways for the smart controls. All right, guys, that's it for the smart controls. So in the next video, we're going to take a look at the overview of key commands and customizing it, as well. See you in the next video. 21. Overview of Key Commands and Customizing: Okay, guys. So in this video, we're going to cover key commands in the logic remote app. And by this, I mean key commands overall for Logic Pro, but we're going to use it in the logic remote app. So first of all, what is key commands? Key commands is basically just different sets of keys that you can set to do something specific in Logic Pro. So if you go to key commands here, edit assignments, and now you have a lot of key commands here. So this is the full list of key commands that you have in Logic Pro. So you can see each thing what it does and what key it has, and you can also set a key for each thing here. You can also do presets. You can import key commands, for instance, you can also save a list with key commands as well. But we also have a dedicated key commands section in the Logic remote app. So to access it, if you go here to the menu, just click key commands here, and now we have a lot of different sets of key commands that are separate from Logic Pro. There's three rows of six buttons here so you can see. You also have this row here with six buttons as well that is not changing. You can scroll through the different key commands here because these key commands here are the most used ones, and that is why it's always there. And these ones are more yeah, less used, right? And here you can see we have 11 pages of key commands, and these pages are added all the time when you work with Logic Remote. So it's going to kind of create key commands for you depending on what you're doing. So if you want to trigger a key command, you just have to tap it. You can also repeat a key command if you hold the button. So let's just play it here. Yeah, so some key commands are not suited for repeating, stop. You just hit Stop once. You can't stop more times. But if you rewind the forward, it can do repeated key command task for you. So if you just hold it like that, it's going to forward it faster, basically. And you can do that with all of the different key commands that it makes sense for, of course. You can also see what key command is actually running right now. So a key command is basically something that you press once and you enable or disable it, right? But here it's a bit different because you can see here Toggle cycle mode is actually on or was on now it's on, now it's off. So you can also see the status of that key command if it's running or not, or if it's enabled or not, as well. So it's not actually just a key command that you press once, and that's it. You can also see if that state is enabled or disabled. You can also browse around these key commands like this. You can also browse them through the dots here so you can see you can also edit a set of key commands. So if you go to settings here and go to Edit key commands, now you can edit kimods. And to edit key commands, you just press one of these cells here, so let's press that one. And now you can choose what key command you want. You can also search through different ones. You can put a color on that key command. You can also remove the key command completely, so it's an empty space here. Okay, so I want to create some new key commands here. So I'm going to do it with a set of new key commands here, right? So this is a fresh page. I'm just hitting one of the cells here, and I want to create key commands for zooming in and zooming out of individual tracks. So if I want to zoom in, for instance, yeah, let's just search for Zoom. Okay, individual track Zoom in. That is actually what I wanted. So perfect. I have that key command here, and now I want to create the next one, so do the same thing here, Zoom and zoom out, right? So that one is going to have a different color just so I can differentiate them. And now I have those two key commands here. I can now test these key commands while in edit mode, so I don't have to quit that in mode to test them, but I have to use two fingerstan. So let's just select a track in Logic Pro and let's see if it works. So I'm going to do the individual track Zoom in. And indeed, it's zooming in. Zoom out. Yeah, it does that as well. Let's say that I want to change the position of this kiman. So just hold it here with one finger and move it right here, and now I have this under each other so that maybe it's better placed for these kimand. If that cell isn't empty, it's just going to switch places just like that. I'm just going to have the Zoom in at the first page here or first row here. Let's go out of Edit key commands here, and now I'm just going to use this key command. As you can see, I have to press it all the time. Now it goes very handy with the feature that I showed you before that is repeating itself if I press and hold, you can see here. It's repeating itself. And now it goes way quicker than just hitting the bottom all the time. You can also do quick editing of a key command. If you just tap a key command with two fingers, then you immediately go into edit mode just for the cell. So that is very nice to do if you're looking for a fast key command. You can also find the key commands in different views here of logic remote. So if you're in Smart Controls and keyboard, you can find key commands just for this here. You can also do it with chord strips, same thing here, live loops as well. And you can also edit these key commands. So you can do the same thing here. Press it with two fingers to edit that one. And you can also edit here with edit key commands. You can also add a key command. So if you go to the last page here, you can click that and you have a new section for adding key command for that cell. And as soon as you've done the key commands for yourself, so let's say that you added a key command, removed or something like that, then you're actually adding and creating a new key command list for Logic remote. And you can take that logic remote key command file and export it. You can also share it to a different iPad, and you can also import a key command file if using a different key command set on a different iPad, for instance, and you want that on your iPad. So if you go to Finder and go to locations, and then you choose your iPad here in the list, then you go to files and you can see Logic remote. If you press the arrow here, then you can see that you're getting these three files here, or two files and one folder. But this is the file that you're looking for, Logikcommands dot P list. And that one you can take it and drag it to, let's say, your documents here, and then it's going to export that and you can have it on your computer. You can also import a logic key commands plist file. So if you have it on your documents or desktop or wherever you have it, you can just drag it in here and it's going to sync it with your iPad and then you're going to have the key commands of that file. All right, guys, that is it. For this video. In the next video, we're going to talk about the library in Logic remote. See you in the next video. 22. The Library: Okay, so in this video, we're going to talk about the library in logic remote. So if you go to the library button here, you can see the library, and it's going to be the same thing as you can see in Logic Pro. So you can see here, I have base drum kit, electronic drum kit, it's going to be the same list. So let's say that you want to change something in your mixer or you want to change an instrument or something like that, then you want to go to the library here. So you have different instrument patches. You also have different patches for each individual section of Logic Pro. So if you go to the mixer here, then you have let's say you have a software instrument track. Then if you go to the library, you will have patches for a full channel strip. So that includes the software instruments, so the plug in, and then you also have audiofixes and other stuff like that. So it's going to be a full channel strips with the Synth or plug in, and then you're also going to have audiofixs in there as well. That is a full patch. If we're here in the mixer, you're going to have a full set of plugins if you choose a patch here. But let's say that I have this synth here, let's here, this alchemy here, right? So I go to the Smart Controls and keyboard, and now I have this one here, right? So if I want to change a synth sound, just a synth sound, not like audioff and other things in the full channel strip, I can just go to Library here. And now I have this here. So I can just, let's say, I want a piano here and now I have a piano here as well. And this is a very cool way to work with different sounds and browsing different patches and auditioning different sounds when playing with them as well with the keyboard. You can also take the library here in the down section where you can have it here, and you can also put it full screen like that. Okay, so let's browse around through different sounds here. That's cool and everything, but I want a piano sound. And I know that I have this piano category here, but maybe I can find some different piano sounds. So let's search for piano, just to make sure that we have all of the piano sounds. And now we have a lot of long lists with different piano sound, right? So let's try this 80s. Let's see here if we go back here, piano, piano, 80s F and piano. Now it's there. That was not maybe what I was looking for, but I showed you how to search for different sounds. When you just press the search button here, you can write in different instruments that you want, and it's going to show up here as well. Okay, so you can also add different audio patches from the library. So if you go back to the mixer here, and I'm going to create, I'm just going to create a new track. So let's go with new track here, and I'm going to create an audio track this time. So here I have my audio track, and now I want to add a patch here. So let's go to a library, and now you can see we have different things in the library. And this becomes very handy when you're recording different instruments. So let's say that you want to record an electric guitar, right? So here we have, let's say, a distorted guitar, and now we add the classic drive, for instance. That is a preset. So let's go back to the mixer now. And you can see if you go to Audio effects here, you can see that it has now added a lot of different plug ins for us, effxes for us. So now it's just ready to hit the record button, and it's going to do some effects for us for the electric guitar. So that is very nice. If we go back here, let's say that we want some voice or vocals here, maybe we want some dance vocals. Fuzz vocal, for instance. Then we go back to the mixer section here. Now we have different settings and different plugins here with some different affixes, as well. You can also find different plugin settings in the library or what you can add from the library as well. But you unfortunately have to go to Logic Pro first. So if we here, you can see we have different plugins, and let's say that we want some presets from the channel EQ. So you have to you can see we have some arrows here on the side here on the left hand side. So if you just press the arrow here, now you can see in the library, we have different presets and it's also going to show us here in the library. So these are the presets for EQ. So let's say that I want a guitar preset for the Q. Now it's going to be changed for this plugin that is selected here. I can just browse around different presets. You can also see here in the thumbnail that I'm changing the EQ settings. Okay, guys, that was it for this video. In the next video, we're going to talk about Apple Loops in Logic Pro remote. 23. Apple Loops in Logic Pro Remote: Okay, so in this video, I'm going to show you briefly how to work with Apple loops. So first of all, I'm just going to create a new project file here, so I'm just going to close it and don't save and now, I'm just going to add the software instruments. So now we have a brand new project file here in Logic Pro. So to browse through the Apple Loops, we go to the live loops here, and now you can see the Apple loops but on. So just go to Apple Loops button. Now you can browse through the different Apple loops. And Apple Loops is a very great way to work with Logic Pro because all of these sounds here are royalty free, so you can use them in your own productions, and you can use them as a starting point, or you can build a track around these Apple loops, for instance. So you can build a track from this premade loop. So all of that loops are pre made loops. Some of them are actually just a set of mini keys for a plugin or for a piano or for a synth or for something like a software instrument or something played, right? You can browse through this by going to instruments here. You can find a lot of different instruments, by categories here, genres as well. And you have the scriptures here. You can also like some loops. So let's say that I like these three. Now these three loops are shown there. You can also search for Appaloops. So let's say I'm a piano lover. So let's search for piano. Now I have a lot of different apa loops. That is in piano. You can also filter by. So you can filter by different sound packs, the sound packs that comes with logic. You can also do different types. So let's say that you only want audio loops or maybe software instrument loops. So that is the medi notes for an instrument instead of a pure audio loop. You can also sort by signature and scale. And you can see that there are a lot of different app loops. You can see as of now, 33,000 items. And this is just growing and growing because they're expanding their apple loops all the time with new versions of logic. Okay, so let's try and add in some apple loops. So first, I want to add, let's say that I want to add some synths, go go into back here. And let's play something. Alright, I like that one. So let's just drag it in here. And this is going to create a new track for us, and we can play it now as a live loop. So I want to add some drums here as well. I have to press this X button to clear the categories that we search for, and now I want to search for a drum here. So let's go with beats this time. Okay, so Yeah, I like the freak beat, right? So let's just take that freak beat, drag it here. And now I have the freak beat here. And I can also play them together here with the scene. Yeah, that sounds great and all, but I want to preview loops when I play this song or one of the loops, for instance. So if I play one of those, let's say that I play the synth and I want to check if there's other drum loops that maybe better with this synth sound instead of the freak loop. Let's play this. And what is very cool here is that everything is in sync. So even though, like, drum loop has a different tempo of the synth or whatever you have here being played, it's going to match the same tempo of it. So that is the very, very nice thing about Apple Loops that everything is in sync. Alright, so let's continuing on with this track here. Yeah, I think I have to do some voluming here as well, because, yeah, it sounds a bit off to me, so That is a very strange song, but it sounds pretty good. And it sounds pretty good because everything is in sync, and you can also hear that the notes and the scales are the same as well, because they also sing. So it's going to sound good in terms of both tempo and musically, as well. But of course, we forgot one type of element here. We forgot the piano. So I'm going to look for a piano here as well. Let's play this track again and look for a piano that sounds good with these three tracks. So you can see some combinations work with others while others doesn't work. So yeah, as you can see, muting and maybe switching out different loops. It's very easy to do so. All with Logic Remote app, you don't have to go to Logic Pro at all for this. All right. That was it for this video. In the next video, we're going to take a look at plugin settings in Logic remote. 24. Plug-In Settings: Okay, so in this video, I want to show you the plug in settings. So this is just preset and different settings for each plug in. So when we have our different tracks here, you also have a plugin for each track. So let's say that we have this software instrument track. I have this retrosynth plugin. And if I press this one here, you can see we have settings here. And with this, I can choose different presets for this plugin. So let's say that I want some strings here, for instance. Now I have this preset on let's say that I want a keyboard. So I can browse through different presets here and auditioning them by just going to this list and press on my media keyboard here. I can also do a similar thing in the library, but this is a completely different thing because here I switching the full channel strip. I don't want that. I want to do just for this plugin. And I can do this for all of different plug ins. So let's say that I want to choose a different plug in here. Let's say that I want synthesizer. Let's choose ES mono here. And now I press this one again, settings, and now I have all of the presets for this plugin. He. Yeah, so it's a very cool and nice way to audition through different presets and just browse through them. Okay, guys, that was it for this video. Hope to see you in the next one. 25. Logic Remote for the iPhone: Alright, so, in this video, I'm just going to talk very briefly about Logic Remote app for the iPhone, as well. So here you can see I have the iPhone app enabled here. And you can see I have a mixer track, and the cool thing here is that I can use the iPhone app at the same time as I use the iPad app. So I can have, let's say, I have the iPad at one place in my studio, let's say the drummer has access to the iPad, and me as a vocalist, for instance, I have the iPhone app just so I can control the project from my iPhone very simply like that. And here you can see if I have it in this way, you can see that I got access to one track only. So it's not going to be the same experience as on your iPad, of course, because you have a lot of more screen real estate here. But here, you can browse through the different tracks by just hitting the arrows here. C. And you can control mute solo. You can do voluming. You can choose sense, IO. So you have a lot of access here as well. But if you do it this way, then you can choose key commands, for instance. You can also, let's say that I choose this instrument, let's say, a software instrument. Now I have access to different things like a midi keyboard. So very cool way as well on the iPhone. I also got access to chord strips. I can't play chords here because it's a bass sound, so it's a mono. And I can also do key commands here. So yeah, very, very cool way. Live loops. You can actually produce music from your iPhone. It's a very small kind of way to do this. But yeah, it works. You can also edit everything. You can do exactly the same thing as you can do on your iPad, and then you have the step sequencer. So step sequencer, same thing here as well. Yeah, so I think that is it for the iPhone. But as you can see, it works really, really good. You can actually have your iPhone as a midi keyboard and do the rest on your iPad. So yeah, you can have two remote apps connected at the same time to one Mac with the Logic Pro. Okay, guys, that is it for this video. Hope to see you in the next one. 26. Join the LogicPro.Academy!: Hi there, I'm Martin Swenson. Congratulations on completing one of my Logic Pro courses here on u Domi. I'm proud of the progress you've made, and I'm excited to share two amazing opportunities to help you take your music production skills to the next level. Today, I want to introduce you to Logic Pro Academy and Music Prod plus. Logic Pro Academy is a 12 week one on one music production program with personalized studio sessions. Recorded just for you from a Vic studio in Stockholm, Sweden. And with Music Prod plus, you'll have access to my entire library of courses, including everything from Utomi for just $9 per month. Plus, as a Utomi student, I'm offering you a free month to explore everything inside Music Prod plus. More on that in a bit. Let's start with Logic Pro Academy. This isn't just another course. A personalized program designed for serious music producers who want to create professional quality music. Over 12 weeks, you'll go through everything from foundational music theory and workflow techniques to advanced production skills, custom tailored to your unique style and goals. Here's how it works. In weeks one and two, you'll dive into a crash course covering everything in Logic Pro. Access to over 40 hours of in depth training and additional music theory and workflow courses. From Week three onward, things get even more exciting. You'll send in a reference track, a song you love and want to recreate or draw inspiration from, and I'll record a custom studio session just for you, guiding you step by step on how to produce a similar track. Each week we'll build on the previous lessons with custom tutorials and feedback tailored for you. What makes Logic Pro Academy truly unique is the one on one approach. Each studio session is recorded personally for you. Giving you insights and techniques that apply directly to your projects. You can also contact me directly on telegram, where we have a private connection there, where you can ask questions anytime. By the end of the 12 weeks, you'll have professional quality music and the confidence to produce tracks you're proud of. So you'll have access to eight personal studio sessions with me, where two of those are going to be where we're working with your music in Avic'sOld studios in Stockholm Sweden. The rest of the six studio sessions are going to be in our music studios in Stockholm Sweden, as well. I created this program because I know how valuable personalized guidance can be. Many students, including myself at one point, wished for a program that offered one on one support where you can ask direct questions and get advice tailored to your unique challenges. Every producer has their own struggles and goals, and that's exactly why I made Logic Pro Academy. To give you the individual support you need to truly grow. This program is entirely self paced, meaning you can progress through each week at your own speed. While the content is organized in weekly segments, there's no pressure to keep up with a set schedule. You can complete each module whenever it suits you, making it flexible for any lifestyle. Whether you prefer to follow along week by week or take it in your own time, the program is designed to fit around you. And because you're one of my Eudimi students, I'm offering you an exclusive $1,000 discounts on this academy program. Over to muspd.com slash Academy Logic to claim this special offer and join the program. This is a limited time offer only for my Utomi students, so don't miss your chance to enroll. Now, let's talk about Music Prod plus. For just $9 a month, you'll get full access to my entire catalog of courses, including everything you see on Udomi and More. With MusicProlus, you can explore any course at your own pace, dive into new genres, find your skills without needing to pay for each individual course. You'll also have access to unlimited feedback from me and my team here at Music Prod. So you can send in your songs to us and we will review them. You can also send in songs that are not finished, and we will also review them and give you some feedback on that as well. As a thank you for being part of my UTM community, I'm offering you one month of MusicProd plus for free. Just go to musprod.com slash MembershIPUDMI, or use the code UTM free at checkout to start your free month. This is a great way to explore all my courses, including advanced topics and specialized skills. Whether you're ready to dive in the personalized one on one experience of Logic Pro Academy or you want unlimited access to all my courses with Music Prod plus, there's a path here for you. Click the links below to learn more, claim your discounts, and continue your journey toward becoming a professional music producer. I can't wait to work with you and help you achieve your musical goals. So thank you again for attending this course and finishing it and see you later in the studio.