New Logic Studio Training Wiki

Posted May 7th, 2009 by



New Logic Studio Training Wiki

We’ve listened to all of your supportive and passionate feedback and the one thing that keeps coming up is the need for a TOC or a categorized index of all our tutorials. And that’s why we’ve created a wiki for you!

Related Content

We’ve listened to all of your supportive and passionate feedback and the one thing that keeps coming up is the need for a TOC or a categorized index of all our tutorials. And that’s why we’ve created a wiki for you!

But first I want to make something clear (and it might help you overcome any of your Logic Studio fears). We launched this site almost two years ago with the idea that we wouldn’t try to duplicate the other tutorials that already exist. There’s some great stuff out there, and most of it gives the impression that you have to learn A before you can start doing B. And for the most part, that couldn’t be further from the truth.

We’ve spoken to many Logic Studio users and they all have different needs. If you’re a guitar player that wants to record, how much MIDI do you need to master before you can begin laying down tracks? Answer: none. And if you’re an experienced film composer that’s switching from another DAW, do you really need to watch a multi-tutorial course on how a piano roll editor works before you can begin scoring? I doubt it.

So that’s why we won’t tell you to start at point A without knowing your individual needs (not that there’s anything wrong with that way of doing things, but we just wanted to give people something different). And that’s one reason why we’ve resisted publishing a linear table of contents. To us, the ideal linear method is to go back to our first tutorial and watch them all in order while writing love notes to your Logic Studio Trainers.

Another reason we’ve resisted a linear method of learning is that tutorials can belong to multiple categories. A tutorial on channel strips can relate to the Arrange Window, the Mixer, multiple editors, and much more. Too much choice had condemned us to decision making paralysis.

But we’ve finally found the cure!

Instead of setting an index in stone and forcing you to watch tutorials that don’t relate to your needs, we built a flexible wiki. It will always be a work in progress but it should become a deep, hyperlinked knowledge resource for Logic Studio.

We have plans to open it up to user editing and we will encourage feedback and contribution.

We’re pretty confident that you’ll get a lot of use out of the wiki and will come back to it again and again as you sharpen your Logic Studio chops. We’re also pretty confident that you’ll thank us. A lot. But not more than we thank you for being subscribers!






Register For The Logic Studio Training Newsletter

Get FREE Instant Access to The Complete Logic Pro, more than 15 chapters of tutorials, a Logic Pro Beginner Guide, and a free webinar called “Discover What's Possible With Logic Pro!”



Comments

 
 

  1. Simei Dublinski says:

    That’s getting hot.
    Good work, Graham!

  2. Withnold Green Withnold Green says:

    Hi Support, I would like to export an audio file with its applying effects to the channel strip. How do I export an audio file from Logic Pro with its effects – Bounce Mix. Somewhat similar to what one does in WaveBurner.
    Regards.
    W.G


Leave a Comment

Please stay on topic with the post. For other questions, use the contact form.








Recent Comments

Graham English says:
I don’t think we can compare any new release of Logic Pro to the Final Cut Pro X release. We already had our...
From: Logic Pro and MainStage Now Available on App Store


Alex / delamar says:
Maybe putting it into the App Store finally means a new version is coming. We heard rumors about Apple redoing the work...
From: Logic Pro and MainStage Now Available on App Store


Rob F says:
I think for me 2012 is the year to finally use main stage on the “main stage” I want to have main stage mixed in to...
From: Logic Pro and MainStage Now Available on App Store


Graham English says:
Also, MainStage is only 30 bucks and gives you access to the same instruments and loops as Logic Pro. Talk about a...
From: Logic Pro and MainStage Now Available on App Store


Graham English says:
I totally agree. That 4+ hour DVD install could be brutal.
From: Logic Pro and MainStage Now Available on App Store


Rob F says:
I think they made a great choice by changing the price and making it more accessible to more musicians, also really like that I...
From: Logic Pro and MainStage Now Available on App Store


nylarch says:
A couple of other nice sources of saturation in Logic: Overdrive is really good – turn the bias almost all the way up so...
From: Top-Secret Analog Tape Saturation Effect [Premium]


Jon Curtis says:
If you save as a Channel Strip, it will keep the 0ms setting.
From: Top-Secret Analog Tape Saturation Effect [Premium]


Graham English says:
This video explains how to create markers. But we also explain how to use them in other videos and on the wiki: Markers.
From: Creating Markers in Logic Pro [Premium]


Graham English says:
Good catch. Thanks, Anthony!
From: Ultrabeat Side Chain Part 1 [Premium]



Our Sponsors