10.6

Table Of Contents
569Logic Pro Instruments
Use the Logic Pro Ultrabeat oscillator 1 side chain
In side chain mode, Ultrabeat uses an external side chain input as the source for
oscillator1. The signal of any audio channel strip, bus, or live input can be routed through
Ultrabeat filters, envelopes, LFO, and step sequencer. Using busses as side chain sources
makes it possible to route signals to the side chain input from any channel strip type that
offers busses as outputs or sends. This includes software instrument channel strips,
aux channel strips, or a mix of multiple channel strips that are routed into a common aux
(subgroup), that has a bus as the output destination.
This feature enables you to use an audio input from oscillator1, along with the synthesis
engine of oscillator2, to create a part live audio, part synthesized drum sound, for
example. As another creative option, you could use one drum sound in a kit to filter an
external audio signal with a sequenced groove.
There are two points to note about side chain use in Ultrabeat:
The side chain affects only the selected drum sound—other Ultrabeat drum sounds and
sequences are not altered.
A side chain audio signal alone is not enough to trigger Ultrabeat. To hear the side
chained audio signal, you need to make sure that Ultrabeat is triggered by MIDI or the
internal step sequencer.
Use an Ultrabeat side chain
1. In Logic Pro, turn on the side chain for oscillator1.
2. Choose the channel strip that you want to use as the side chain input source from the
Side Chain pop-up menu at the top of the plug-in window.
3. Start playback of your audio source/host application.
4. Play a note on your MIDI keyboard (that corresponds to the side chained drum sound).
Alternatively, you can use the step sequencer to play a pattern for the side chained
drum sound.