How do you make addictive drums sound real?
Here are a few common tricks you can do if the beat feels ‘programmed’ and maybe not as groovy as you want.
- Get off the grid.
- Play the beat…
- Groove quantize template or humanizing.
- Program each drum fill slightly different.
- Purchase grooves recorded by a real drummer.
- Add live recorded percussion.
How do you EQ snares?
Start with rolling off the extreme lows so that the snare isn’t interfering with your kick and sub bass. Somewhere around 80hz should do the trick. Next add a gentle boost around 7kHz and high shelf around 12kHz to let the snare cut through. Lastly add a boost around 200-250hz for the body of the snare.
Can you make a drum beat with Logic Pro?
By layering different drum parts that come with Logic Pro, you can make basic to advanced beats. By making each drum part on it’s own track, you can easily create the drum structure for a song. All you need is Logic Pro (you can use this same technique in other DAWs or plugins) and a little creativity.
What do you need to know about Logic Pro?
Logic Pro lets you create automation either for individual regions or entire tracks. For example, if you want the same filter movement to repeat for every bar of a synth sequence, select Region Automation.
How does a stack work on Logic Pro X?
Grouping complementary sounds together using Logic’s Track Stacks makes mixing much easier. Suddenly, all of your drums can share a single fader, and auxiliary effects added to a Stack will affect all sounds inside it in the same way. Select the individual tracks you want to ‘stack’ and right-click to select the option from the dropdown menu.
How do I add sound to Logic Pro X?
Browse to the location and double-click the relevant Logic Pro X project. Step 3: Click the Content for the sound (s) you want – and, if you like, the auxiliary effects and automation you used, too, then click Add. The regions from that project will be added to your current project – move them, edit them and drop them wherever you like.