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Table Of Contents
231Logic Pro User Guide
Record your voice or a musical instrument
Overview of recording in Logic Pro
In Logic Pro, you have many powerful recording options for recording voices, electric
instruments, acoustic instruments, and software instruments. When recording either
audio or MIDI, you can choose to record one track at a time, record multiple tracks at
once (called multitrack recording), replace audio or MIDI recordings, or record multiple
performances over the same section of a track, called take recording.
Once you have created your audio takes, you can then comp your audio recordings. This
process involves selecting the best parts from the different performances and piecing
them together into a single, master composite take. You can also punch in and out of audio
recordings to overwrite a portion of a previously recorded track.
With software instruments, you can record the MIDI parts using real-time recording
techniques, or you can use step input recording techniques, which allow you to insert
MIDI notes when not recording in real time. And there are several advanced recording
techniques available that can help speed up your workflow.
Note: If you have added a fade out, it is temporarily deactivated during recording, so that
you can hear what you record.
Record audio
Before recording audio in Logic Pro
You can record your voice, an acoustic instrument, or any other sound using your
computers built-in microphone or a microphone connected to your computer either
directly or via an audio interface. You record sound from a microphone to an audio track.
Before you start recording audio, do the following:
Check hardware connections and settings, making sure that any sound source you plan
to use in your session—microphone or mixer, for example—is connected to the audio
inputs of your system and is working. You should also check hardware settings such as
the system memory requirement and disk space.
Choose the recording file type—AIFF, WAV, or CAF—for audio data before recording.
Set the audio recording path, which is only necessary if you want to save recorded
audio outside of the project.
Set the project sample rate, which is the number of times per second the audio signal is
sampled. Recording at a sample rate of 44.1kHz is recommended for most situations.