Mindblowed me how simple yet effective this is. Your tutorial made it really easy to follow and gave me new peserpective on panning, I will definitely use this technique in my future projects. Thanks a lot!
Thank you for reminding us all that the "Pan" in Logic is not really true panning but just a volumen balancer. I have heard that before but now I understand it better!
Realy interesting video. I've never used the direction mixer plugin, and maybe I will now, but I actualy use the stereo pan and I've never understood why this is not the default setting in Logic. All my instruments/channel "user's patch" are saved with a stereo pan (and the gain plugin as well). Keep on your good work, Mr. Tech
Finallly..someone who explains this in a way that's easier to understand! Ive listened to a few tutorials on here but brain switched off with all the waffling..you made it eaiser by making references to the orchestra. I'm a string olayer and have lots to learn in music production so thank you 😊
This is the first video I’ve watched of yours but this is absolute gold already. I like your approach to the information, it’s clear, concise and backed with practical examples. Subscribed!
You’re a great instructor! How would you apply this to drum parts? Also, do you have any videos related to the “spread” effect in Logic or do you have another approach? Cheers
Exactly what I was looking for. quick question I got a track exported to the left and I don’t have access to the mono track there’s any way to duplicate the de same track in the opposite direction (right) @musicTech
Hi Jono. How much importance do you give to the correlation meter? I find that my mixes never sound wide enough as I try to keep them to the right of the centre marking by reducing stereo width.
So what I heard was a mono signal panned acts as you expect it to when panning. Just choosing the path at which you hear it But a stereo signal. Like overheads would cut one mic or the other. Depending on how you panned it. Similarly recording an acoustic guitar with two mics for a stereo sound, you need “stereo pan” to place it slightly left. Panning otherwise will just cut one mic or the other. This is why I’ll just keep recording in dual mono.
When you narrow the stereo image using the 'stereo paaner' it looked like you just dragged from the bottom of the pan dial, this doesn't work in my logic. Are you holding an addtional key? Also if I hold the cmd key the pan dial turns orange, any idea what this means? Thanks.
Jono Buchanan, 👍 Thank you for Brilliant Logic Tips🙏❤️
Mindblowed me how simple yet effective this is. Your tutorial made it really easy to follow and gave me new peserpective on panning, I will definitely use this technique in my future projects. Thanks a lot!
You are the 1st person who genuinely had a strong knowledge and expertly explained the the logic planning situation thank you so much
Wow I didn’t know you could narrow the spread with the stereo pan!
Thank you for reminding us all that the "Pan" in Logic is not really true panning but just a volumen balancer. I have heard that before but now I understand it better!
Realy interesting video.
I've never used the direction mixer plugin, and maybe I will now, but I actualy use the stereo pan and I've never understood why this is not the default setting in Logic.
All my instruments/channel "user's patch" are saved with a stereo pan (and the gain plugin as well).
Keep on your good work, Mr. Tech
Jono is AMAZING!! Straight to the point - efficient and informative. thank you :)
Finallly..someone who explains this in a way that's easier to understand! Ive listened to a few tutorials on here but brain switched off with all the waffling..you made it eaiser by making references to the orchestra. I'm a string olayer and have lots to learn in music production so thank you 😊
Another great video. Straight to the point, and as informative as ever.
Thanks mate
Man these are like gold. Iv been struggling to work this out for ages
Absolutely brilliant thank you!
This is awesome. Massive. Didn't know.
Id pay for this guy to teach me, fantastic teacher. Does he have a personal channel?
Very nice.... thx u for this succinct demo.
Very informative!! Thank you and God bless you! 🙏🏻🙏🏻
Glad it was helpful!
Owao that’s a great tutorial
I was looking this panning system in so many’s ways but I couldn’t get it. Today you made easy
Thank you so much
This is the first video I’ve watched of yours but this is absolute gold already. I like your approach to the information, it’s clear, concise and backed with practical examples. Subscribed!
super great video thank you
these tutorials are bang on, thanks mate
Amazingly, all parts become easier to hear and sound twice as loud too!
Just the issue I was looking for the answer to. - straightforward and clear - thanks Jono!!
my music professor struggled to explain this. Thanks 🥺
This is insane. Had no idea logic had these hidden gems
Thanks Jono! It still behooves me as to why LPX has not made Stereo Pan, instead of Balance, a preference that you can set to a global default.
Very useful, it's not something I've used much. Thanks, Jono.
Glad it was helpful!
Fantastic video, exactly what I needed and really clearly articulated. Thanks!
I look forward to these coming out. Was it uploaded again? I thought I saw it yesterday.
Yes, we had a little problem with the audio. Fixed now!
You are such a great teacher Jono thanks so much!
Very useful jono thanks
Glad to hear that
Just amazing instruction. Thanks!
Thanks
Great explanation, thanks so much for this🙏
is this info insane or what! thanks Jono, for this massive insight!
Thanks so much! Great explanation! Easy to understand.
You’re a great instructor! How would you apply this to drum parts?
Also, do you have any videos related to the “spread” effect in Logic or do you have another approach?
Cheers
awesome video thanks!!
Wow thanks for this
You're welcome 😊
This helps me a ton, thanks a mil!
Well done sir! This is awesome!!
Awesome
Legend!
So simple, and yet Brilliant! I've wasted so much of my life...
Greetings Great Jono B. As usual your explanations are genius. My Logic sounds play back on one side without panning. Please help.
Exactly what I was looking for. quick question I got a track exported to the left and I don’t have access to the mono track there’s any way to duplicate the de same track in the opposite direction (right) @musicTech
Thank youuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
👑
Hi Jono. How much importance do you give to the correlation meter? I find that my mixes never sound wide enough as I try to keep them to the right of the centre marking by reducing stereo width.
Is it the same features of Boz digital labs pan knob?
So what I heard was a mono signal panned acts as you expect it to when panning. Just choosing the path at which you hear it But a stereo signal. Like overheads would cut one mic or the other. Depending on how you panned it. Similarly recording an acoustic guitar with two mics for a stereo sound, you need “stereo pan” to place it slightly left. Panning otherwise will just cut one mic or the other. This is why I’ll just keep recording in dual mono.
How do you still make it mono compatible (or do you at all)?
When you narrow the stereo image using the 'stereo paaner' it looked like you just dragged from the bottom of the pan dial, this doesn't work in my logic. Are you holding an addtional key?
Also if I hold the cmd key the pan dial turns orange, any idea what this means? Thanks.
I did a stereo pan but when I open ozone imager to see the spread it’s still showing it’s a full stereo sound in L and R. Any idea why 🤔
i got to know this after 12 years
u think u can use it on a rap vocal?
what about those who use logic 10.2.3???????
Wonderful! This is so helpful, thank you.