Apple updates Logic Pro X with more Drummer options, Alchemy enhancements
Apple on Tuesday updated Logic Pro X, its digital audio workstation, with a group of new features as well as various bugfixes.
The upgraded software includes extra "Pop," "Songwriter," and "Latin" Drummers, according to Apple. New Drummer loops can be added to a song and tweaked using performance controls.
The pitch of an audio region, meanwhile, can now be tuned or transposed, and individual steps in the Arpeggiator plug-in can be changed. Alchemy improvements include additive effects, and an automatic time align feature for morphing.
Apple is also promising a more responsive user interface in general, and fixes for Low Latency Mode beyond the first two outputs. Lastly, volume automation should reset as intended when a cycle starts over.
For existing owners, the update is a free download through the Mac App Store. Logic Pro X is $199.99 new, and requires OS X 10.11 or later.
The upgraded software includes extra "Pop," "Songwriter," and "Latin" Drummers, according to Apple. New Drummer loops can be added to a song and tweaked using performance controls.
The pitch of an audio region, meanwhile, can now be tuned or transposed, and individual steps in the Arpeggiator plug-in can be changed. Alchemy improvements include additive effects, and an automatic time align feature for morphing.
Apple is also promising a more responsive user interface in general, and fixes for Low Latency Mode beyond the first two outputs. Lastly, volume automation should reset as intended when a cycle starts over.
For existing owners, the update is a free download through the Mac App Store. Logic Pro X is $199.99 new, and requires OS X 10.11 or later.
Comments
Talking of Logic sorry OT, I love the ability to use an analog style speed change with pitch change so easily and quickly (as opposed to without pitch change which was so amazing in its day lol) since you can correct the pitch of old material altered due to tape machine motor inaccuracies. However, saving that corrected version seems ridiculously complex. There appears to be no equivalent of Aperture's 'save version', instead I have to jump through twenty hoops. Has any Logic user found a simple and fast way to simply save out the pitch corrected version? I have to believe I am missing something here!