
How Do You Mix Tracks In Logic Pro?Įvery engineer, producer or audio enthusiast has their own process for mixing, and there is in no way one best way to mix. Okay maybe not your wildest dreams, especially if you’re one to eat cheese before bed…īut your craziest audio fantasies? They are just a few clicks and key commands away. Luckily, we live in an age where your wildest dreams are at your fingertips. Unfortunately, sound engineers of old did not have access to this luxury.Īudio editing meant physically slicing tape with a razor, and splicing them back together – no Command Z here…Īpplying volume automation throughout a track was hardly ‘auto’, it often involved a group of engineers riding the faders in real time as they bounced a track out to a 2-track.Īpplying compression to a track meant physically patching in an outboard compressor and fiddling with actual knobs.Īnd with physical outboard gear comes a limitation, you only have as many compressors as you have! You can’t just keep adding plugin after plugin… Then, you can quickly move on to Mastering. And if you mess it up, Command Z is your best friend! In minutes, you can use Autotune in Logic Pro X to clean up a vocal track, switch to the Scissors tool to make some quick cuts, and apply automation in an instant. In a time before Autotune *gasp*, USB microphones and digital audio workstations like Logic, mixing a track was an incredibly complex and laborious activity. Your track needs mixing! A Long Time Ago In A Recording Studio Far, Far Away… Sure, the instruments sound pretty great out of the box, but once you layer in several synths, a couple of drum kits, a sweet bass line and some vocal chops, you start to realise something. Same goes for producing electronic music in Logic, or any other software for that matter.

You can’t just put up a few mics, hit record, and expect a polished track to turn up in your DAW. If you want your tracks to keep up on the sonic stage, you need to learn how to mix in Logic Pro X.


It’s a question we’ve all asked, sitting in front of a laptop listening back to your recordings and thinking, what am I missing? How do the pros get their tracks sounding so damn good? This post was most recently updated on June 18th, 2023
