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David Nahmani

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David Nahmani last won the day on April 12

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My Logic Pro book

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  1. Wait... reverse the phase?? That won't change the stereo image. If all you wanted to do was swap the Left and Right channels of a channel strip, then there's no need to bounce anything. You can Control + click the Pan knob on the Overheads and Room channel strips, choose Stereo Pan, then Command + click the Stereo Pan to swap L and R: you'll see an orange ring around the Stereo Pan knob to show that the L and R are swapped.
  2. If you've already recorded audio files in your project then I would complete the project in 44.1 kHz and from now on start your new projects in 48 kHz. Note that the difference between the two is quite subtle.
  3. Drag the audio files back to different tracks, Select the 4 audio regions and choose Edit > Move > To Recorded Position, Choose Functions > Folder > Pack Take Folder.
  4. Try having a look through the following topics: https://www.logicprohelp.com/tags/essential sounds/
  5. Did you try clicking that orange cuved arrow symbol next to Sounds for "Project"?
  6. Did you quit Logic before trashing the .cs file?
  7. No, the industry standard is 48 kHz. A sampling frequency of 48 kHz is recommended for the origination, processing and interchange of audio programs employing pulse-code modulation (Source: https://www.aes.org/standards/comments/drafts/aes5-r-cfc-180904.pdf) 44.1 kHz was the old sampling rate used for Compact Discs. Many commercial studios record, process and edit at 48 kHz then mix in analog on large SSL consoles, recording the analog output of the SSL as a 96 kHz file delivered to the mastering engineer. A few rare producers choose to record, process and edit at 96 kHz. Anything above 96 kHz is offered only as a selling point for marketing purpose for the DAW manufacturers.
  8. Ok good to hear it's working now, let us know if you get this issue again.
  9. Here are the assignments in the default U.S. preset, but you're free to reassign them to whatever you'd like:
  10. Yes! That's the quickest and easiest way to turn your sliced Quick Sampler loop into multiple tracks in your Mixer:
  11. It's hard to tell where the pitch bend curve starts and ends because of the small horizontal zoom level. I would zoom in closer onto each pitch bend curve and double-check the position of the curve vs the note. Feel free to share your project file if you want one of us to see what's wrong.
  12. @polanoid did you get a chance to try it again?
  13. I don't remember the 10.5.1 behavior but I do agree that ideally, the Enable Patch Merging pane should stay open when you select a new track.
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