Very interesting. It is one of the Logic functions that I use the least, but it never ceases to surprise me. I love how you make it understood. Greetings from Spain.
Hi there and thanks for your kind words! It is true that Logic was designed as a DAW first, with the notation feature as an extra! I've had to use the notation feature in my work and have discovered that others use the Score Editor for professional results! That surprised me as well. :) It took me awhile to figure out how to get around the Score Editor as its User Interface is unlike traditional notation apps such as Sibelius and Musescore. This makes sense because it should work in combination with its recording side! Thanks for dropping by @cone-stone
LP is a DAW first, with its notation capability as an extra. So it handles score notation quite differently from say, Sibelius or Musescore. Thanks for dropping by!
Very interesting. It is one of the Logic functions that I use the least, but it never ceases to surprise me.
I love how you make it understood.
Greetings from Spain.
Hi there and thanks for your kind words! It is true that Logic was designed as a DAW first, with the notation feature as an extra! I've had to use the notation feature in my work and have discovered that others use the Score Editor for professional results!
That surprised me as well. :)
It took me awhile to figure out how to get around the Score Editor as its User Interface is unlike traditional notation apps such as Sibelius and Musescore. This makes sense because it should work in combination with its recording side! Thanks for dropping by @cone-stone
Interesting, I am not a Logic Pro user but I found this video still informative to see how it handles scores. Thanks for the video.
LP is a DAW first, with its notation capability as an extra. So it handles score notation quite differently from say, Sibelius or Musescore. Thanks for dropping by!