extrememixing Posted January 20, 2022 Share Posted January 20, 2022 Just wondering if there is any reason to have all of my tracks come up through an Aux input. In Pro Tools there are several reasons why this works better, or at least differently than it does through just a master fader. Masters are not pre fader. I don't think Logic is either since you can pull the fader down to stop overs. Master plug ins also don't get delay compensation applied. Any reason to mix through an Aux in Logic Pro X? I have not been using one, but I find myself mixing more and more stuff in Logic. Whare are your thoughts on this? Steve Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Nahmani Posted January 21, 2022 Share Posted January 21, 2022 No reason unless that helps for your workflow, for example if you want one of the tracks to be unaffected by the mastering plug-ins on the master fader then you route the track directly to the Stereo Out, bypassing the Aux. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
extrememixing Posted January 21, 2022 Author Share Posted January 21, 2022 Got it. So it you're mixing a song that you know will have a fade, then it might be good to have a sub master so that you don't pull the threshold down as you fade, but other than to solve something like that, no issues. And all plugs on any fader get delay compensation. I get sessions from certain DAWs that have 30-60ms of space before the actual sounds start every time. It's always been that way. That means the they don't line up with the grid exactly with out a little nudge. I don't recall getting that when I knew it was from Logic. No bip prefix. Steve Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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