Informative, "UBER EXCELLENT VIDEO". Your demonstration of EQ-ing the reverb and delay was eye opening. Also, the comment about adjusting "Trim" at (14.13) into the video was the silver bullet for which I had been searching. Cheers mate
Great video. I subscribed after watching this one. I make great music but still working on my mixing skills. I unfortunately always have to hire a mix engineer to be satisfied.
I'm trying to take single track analogue recordings from the 90's, feed them into Logic Pro X and improve the sound quality. Do you know what that process is called? I can't find anything about this subject online. The only thing the internet talks about is how to make new digital recordings sound more Analogue. I'm trying to do the exact opposite. Any advice? Do you have any tutorials on that subject? Anything? Thanks
This was really useful, thanks for posting! When you put your delay into a reverb in series, do you have both on 100% signal, or do you keep one with some dry signal coming through?
Audio candy! Wow, what an expression. Your entire tutorial has been one sweet audio candy to me! Am familiar with GB but having need to know about LPX. I have no grasp of bussing and aux tracks. Do you have more audio candies on these topics?
A key element which is done totally wrong in this video is that the little round dial which is the send to the bus, determines how much of the dry signal goes to the reverb, not the main channel fader. So there are two approaches to properly sending a signal to the bus; either you alt click and send the full signal on the little dial, however, then on the bus return fader you turn that fader down for the desired amount, option 2, is you keep the bus fader at unity gain and then dial up how much you want to send on the little round dial, namely the send. Personally I like to keep the bus fader at unity gain, and fade into the reverb, so that the desired amount is easily achieved and so that the buss faders remain at zero inline with the rest of the gain staging. Thirdly with workflow this means you simply turn up a little dial, to about 20 or so, this in hand, creates the aux with the bus automatically and you're done.
Make sure you're right clicking on the bus track itself in order to 'create the track'. If you're looking to add a bus then that would be a left click on the track.
🙋🏼♂hi everyone, here are my 6 pillars to learning Logic Pro Faster (FREE): www.charlescleyn.com/learn-logic
this is the first vid that i finally understood busses
Clarity, pace and simplicity are the trademarks of a good teacher, Absolutely love your tutorials Charles. Thank you.
thanks so much, sorry for the delay in response!
@@CharlesCleynAnd I'm gonna put some reverb on your delayed response 😄.. Anyway, it was really a great tutorial Charles.. 👌👌👌
@@jijobabyjose8261haha I love this
I appreciate your dedication to helping others. 🙏🏿
I'm glad you like the videos :)
This video should have way more views. Great explanation of every step without over deluding it. I appreciate it!
Informative, "UBER EXCELLENT VIDEO". Your demonstration of EQ-ing the reverb and delay was eye opening. Also, the comment about adjusting "Trim" at (14.13) into the video was the silver bullet for which I had been searching. Cheers mate
This was amazing! Thanks so much for such great explanations and direction! You're a wonderful teacher!
thank you very much Christopher, I really appreciate that.
You are the best. ❤❤❤
Instructions are so clear and right to the point. Amazing stuff. You got anther lifelong subscriber. Cheers
Super helpful, Charles. Wow. Now I finally get bussing! You're a great teacher, man.
Thank you Charles! You are the absolute best at explaining this stuff. A real eye opener
Super helpful, thank you bro!
This morning, i've watched quite a bit of tutorials regarding Reverb & delay and i am glad finding yours, It's clearly explained and i learned a lot.
Perhaps the best educational video I've ever seen!
Finally, understood Busses. Thanks man 😭🙏🏽
Great video, thank you!
WOW! Lots of great info. I’m relatively new to Logic and knowing how to bus helps incredibly. Thanks for all the instructions!
Great info thank you so much!
Great demonstration of how to use these, thanks! I was needing to know how to do this just in the last few days. 👍
Awesome to hear James thanks.
thank you bro was very helpful missed class today you were better than the teacher im sure many thanks keep up the good work
What a clear explanation, TOP, thank you I learned a lot. The best. Thanks
Incredible
This is BRILLIANT. Thank you for this great tutorial. 👍
You’re very welcome Richard!
That was verry interesting 🙏 thanks for this great tutorial 🙌🏼
very happy to hear that, thank you!
Great video. I subscribed after watching this one. I make great music but still working on my mixing skills. I unfortunately always have to hire a mix engineer to be satisfied.
That's great man, keep going and learning from the people you hire.
Outstanding lesson. Thank you.
that was helpful and explained perfectly thanks heaps!!
thanks for watching!
This wasn’t the video I wanted…. But it’s the video I needed
Thank you very much, ur an outstanding teacher 👏 👏 👏
Man this was one of the most helpful videos I've ever watched. Thanks so much for making it!
dude, thanks a lot for the kind comment!
Good demo I will use your suggestions. Thanks
Thanks Russell, best of luck
I'm trying to take single track analogue recordings from the 90's, feed them into Logic Pro X and improve the sound quality. Do you know what that process is called? I can't find anything about this subject online. The only thing the internet talks about is how to make new digital recordings sound more Analogue. I'm trying to do the exact opposite. Any advice? Do you have any tutorials on that subject? Anything? Thanks
hey Patrick, I don't have specific advice on this. You might want to look at some restoration plugins, it sounds like those could help.
This was really useful, thanks for posting! When you put your delay into a reverb in series, do you have both on 100% signal, or do you keep one with some dry signal coming through?
Awesome! I learned a lot in this video. Thank you very much!
Audio candy! Wow, what an expression. Your entire tutorial has been one sweet audio candy to me! Am familiar with GB but having need to know about LPX. I have no grasp of bussing and aux tracks. Do you have more audio candies on these topics?
More coming soon but you also might be interested in my 6 pillars to learn Logic Pro faster: www.charlescleyn.com/learn-logic
@@CharlesCleyn Thank you son.
Hey Charles, Great tutorial.! How about having the bus send pre-fader..your thoughts. Thanks again!
hey clark, good question, I'm not exactly sure, I don't play with pre-fader much, I can't even remember what it does.
Very helpful. Thank you so much.
Really nicely done, thank you!
Great tutorial 👌🏻
thanks for the tip Charles, very useful 👍👌
you're welcome Kristof :)
Excellent. Thank you!
Makes busing easier. Thanks!💜
You're welcome Lilian!
This guy is a gem
thanks for the kind words Anthony
Great video like always !
thanks so much ! that song though is fire 🔥
you're welcome Al
Great video 👍🏼
Brilliant 🤩 alway learn something keep up the great work 😎
thanks very much Christopher :)
You're always helpful to me thanks alot
One of the most helpful producing videos I’ve ever seen. Ah-hah moment
Thank you Charles ! 🙌
Awesome! Thanks!
we would love tutorials about valhalla reverb pls
Hey Al, here's a tutorial I have on valhalla reverb: ruclips.net/video/T2qAQuHd9mU/видео.html
@@CharlesCleyn Thanks so much 🙏🏾
Excellent and thank you
You’re very welcome Lee
Thank you so much well done.
Thank You very much
Big respect for this
You’re welcome Gerald
Thanks for sharing bro
A key element which is done totally wrong in this video is that the little round dial which is the send to the bus, determines how much of the dry signal goes to the reverb, not the main channel fader. So there are two approaches to properly sending a signal to the bus; either you alt click and send the full signal on the little dial, however, then on the bus return fader you turn that fader down for the desired amount, option 2, is you keep the bus fader at unity gain and then dial up how much you want to send on the little round dial, namely the send. Personally I like to keep the bus fader at unity gain, and fade into the reverb, so that the desired amount is easily achieved and so that the buss faders remain at zero inline with the rest of the gain staging. Thirdly with workflow this means you simply turn up a little dial, to about 20 or so, this in hand, creates the aux with the bus automatically and you're done.
I also like the song is it available yet?
Great video. But that right click to get bus track added is not working.
Nothing coming after right click. Can anything be done about that?
Make sure you're right clicking on the bus track itself in order to 'create the track'. If you're looking to add a bus then that would be a left click on the track.
I like the song - reminds me of Death Cab
Thanks Matthew
Thank u , ima make a hit rq
super!
Do you have any other tips on using reverb or delay in your productions? I'm curious, let me know what you think in a comment ↓
How do you record in logic and get audio on mac? i can't do it
hey man, that's a big can of worms! But I'm happy to help you through the process, the best place to start is here: www.charlescleyn.com/learn-logic
If the singer is good you don't need all that junk especially the delay.
To each their own