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Table Of Contents
35Logic Pro User Guide
3. If necessary, click the Details triangle to open the bottom of the dialog.
4. Make sure that “A Software Instrument” appears on the pop-up menu on the left, and
Output 1-2” appears on the Output pop-up menu on the right.
5. Make sure the Open Library checkbox is selected.
6. Click Create.
The new track appears in the Tracks area, and the Library opens on the left.
Choose a software instrument patch
In the Library, click a category on the left, then click a patch name on the right.
You can audition software instrument patches by clicking them in the Library, then playing
your music keyboard, to find the one you want to use. For more information about choosing
patches, see Logic Pro patches overview.
Record a software instrument
1. Select the software instrument track you want to record to.
2. Move the playhead to the point where you want to start recording.
3. Click the Record button in the control bar (or press R) to start recording.
4. After a one-bar count-in, recording starts. The recording appears as a new software
instrument region on the track as you record.
5. Click the Stop button in the control bar (or press the Space bar) to stop recording.
For more information about recording software instruments, see Overview of recording in
Logic Pro and Record software instruments in Logic Pro. For information about connecting
a music keyboard, see Using MIDI devices with Logic Pro overview.
Get started with Logic Pro track header controls
Each track has a track header that shows the track name and icon, as well as a number of
track controls including Mute, Solo, and Record Enable buttons. Audio tracks also feature
an Input Monitoring button. The track headers are located along the left side of the Tracks
area, so you can easily see the mute, solo, and other settings for all tracks while working.
Some track header controls, including volume, pan, mute, and solo controls, correspond to
channel strip controls on the track’s channel strip in the Mixer—changing one (for instance,
dragging the Volume slider in a track header) produces a corresponding change in the
other (in this case, the Volume fader on the track’s channel strip).