Another nice touch, so to speak, was the jog-wheel control, which can be employed in situations where a little more precision is required than afforded by regular touch controls. Again, some of the features unique to the iPad were arguably the most impactful, such as the ability to use the iPad cameras to record clips that can be used immediately in the current Project - ideal for storyboarding and more - and a truly superb feature called Live Drawing, allowing you to quickly create hand-drawn footage with the Apple Pencil. While Logic Pro is obviously most germane to Sound On Sound readers, both Mary Spender and film maker extraordinaire Andy To demonstrated Final Cut Pro, which was also very impressive for anyone with even a passing interest in video production. Again, the connected Studio Display mirrors the iPad’s display. One foudroyant feature was Plug-in Tiles, giving quick access to essential controls in a Live-esque manner, without taking over the screen - a stroke of genius in this context.Īndy To demonstrates Final Cut Pro for iPad’s ability to shoot footage using the iPad Pro’s rear camera. And although I can’t go into the details just yet - look out for a full review once the app has been released-there were so many aspects that will delight both new and existing Logic Pro (and even GarageBand) users alike. Having produced the Lil Nas X track Montero, which is the Demo Project currently included with the Mac version of Logic Pro, the pair’s enthusiasm in using Logic Pro on an iPad was evident as they showed off working with Step Sequencer, and two new tools: Sample Alchemy and the highly infectious Beat Breaker.Īt one point, I did have to apologise for my exclamatory use of certain, choice Anglo-Saxon vocabulary as I began to realise exactly what Logic Pro for iPad could facilitate from a creative perspective. Later, Apple invited producers Denzel Baptiste and David Biral - better known as the production duo Take a Daytrip - to blow us away (quite literally, with the monitoring level set for the Genelec speakers) with some electronically-styled hip-hop. The Studio Display mirroring the iPad Pro is connected via a hub, which also accommodates the Duet 3 interface from Apogee for audio output. As simple as it is brilliant.ĭavid Biral (left) and Denzel Baptiste, better known as Take a Daytrip, introduce Logic Pro for iPad. This means you can tap the paint tool and just draw the desired automation smoothly across a Track’s automation view, exactly as you would expect. Because while you might previously have tried using an Apple Pencil to draw automation on an iPad, tethered to a Mac via Sidecar, support for this handy accessory is now supported natively by Logic Pro for iPad. But this was all happening on an iPad although, frankly, Spender had me at automation. Now, you might be thinking this sounds like a typical example of someone using Logic Pro, and normally you’d be right. With a guitar at the ready, Spender laid bare the writing process behind a new song from the very first ideas, which had been recorded at a live gig and later built upon by adding a Drummer Track, to the final polished production awash with layers of guitar tracks and multi-take solos, fuelled by Logic Pro’s amp effects. The proceedings were opened by the delightfully imaginative Mary Spender, whose work exemplifies what it means to be musically creative in the modern world. And that question has now been answered with the surprisingly stealth release of Logic Pro for iPad and Final Cut Pro for iPad. Ever since the late Steve Jobs ushered in the post-PC era with the launch of the iPad, positioning Apple at the intersection of technology and the liberal arts, there has been much speculation as to whether the company would bring its professional applications for music and video production to the iPad. However, these weren’t just any two apps. On May 9th, Apple hosted an informal event in Los Angeles to unveil two new iPad apps for creative professionals.
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