Welcome to day 32 of “Newbie to Ninja” here on WLPR! “Newbie to Ninja” is a beginner’s guide to Apple’s Logic Pro. Videos drop daily (Mondays-Fridays) for the next several weeks.
If you’re brand new to Logic Pro, this series will help you go from feeling like a beginner to complete comfort in Apple’s amazing DAW.
Today let’s take full advantage of Logic’s Mixer with Sends, Busses & Auxiliary Channel Strips. Often a source of confusion for new users, learn what exactly a Send, Bus, and Aux actually is, why we use them, and how to set them up for helpful routing in your Projects.
Check out today’s video above for all the details!
P.S. Prefer to download and own the entire Newbie to Ninja series? Click here to own the entire 40-video course today.
dear Chris
thank you for the amazing work and the effort spent in these series.
just to let you know that i’m a follower to your channel even since i started producing and yes, i’ve learned a lot.
now i have an issue with logic and couldn’t find a single video or tutorial talking about it (as if this is a secret exclusive to sound engineers)
i bought a digital mixer (RCF m20) for no reason 🙂 as i could have done the mixing and everything inside of logic but anyway.
now all of my logic tracks are directed to main output in the mixer and i don’t know what is the best way to rout every channel (sound) to its proper strip on the mixer, also i don’t know what is to be mono and what is to be stereo.
is there a template or at least a video that explains this ?
thank you very much
lastly, i always wanted to share some of my projects with you, don’t know why but maybe because i see you as my mentor, so kindly allow me to do it sometimes to get your feedback (FYI, i do good music especially in techno)
thanks again
best,
Sherif Mosalam