Back to the top

Rob’s Blog

Switching from Pro Tools to Logic: Bad Idea or Worst Idea Ever?

It’s been about 6 months since I switched from Pro Tools (10) to Logic Pro X (10.3) and now that I’m fairly up to speed on the new platform I am so going to judge! If you’re thinking of switching and you assume the transition will be smooth, it won’t be (like that time I assumed I could get by in Portuguese by speaking Spanish with a German accent). But read on and fear not! Learn from my struggles! Laugh at my pain! And hopefully I can help you decide whether or not you should make the leap yourself.

To the question “will my stuff sound the same” the answer is “yes.” You’ll still get to your musical destination, it’ll just be in a car with the steering wheel on the opposite side and when you reach to turn on the radio you hit the AC. You’ll be able to record, pan, automate, send to busses, edit, quantize, and generally futz with your signals to your heart’s content. You’ll be able to bring along any 3rd party instruments and plug-ins that use Audio Units, as I was able to use the BFD2 drum sample player and library from FXPansion, my Session Horns and Session Strings libraries for the Kontakt 5 player from Native Instruments, and 3 virtual instruments from AIR Music Technology. I was even able to route the extra sends from BFD2 into a bus in my Logic mix, very helpful when using the kick drum to activate a side chain compressor for the bass.

Bundled with Logic is an impressive group of instruments and samples, but I did find myself missing a couple of things that came bundled with Pro Tools. The first thing I missed was the Mini Grand virtual piano instrument from AIR Music Technology. There are a couple of grand piano presets in the ES24 sample player that comes with Logic but the sound just doesn’t compare. Mini Grand has such a rich and full sound I used it exclusively for piano (my song Flashback Wife on my latest album A/B is just the Mini Grand accompanying the vocal and it works beautifully).

I also missed the XPand!2 module from my Pro Tools bundle, and I realized this when searching for—of all things—orchestra hits (don’t judge! O.K., judge a little). I couldn’t believe Apple didn’t have anything approaching an orchestra hit in all of its instruments and patches. Has their millennial-oriented marketing overlooked 80s and 90s cheese!? At the risk of saying that lack of orchestra hits was almost a deal-breaker, lack of cheesy orchestra hits was almost a deal-breaker, so I contacted AIR Music Technology to see if I could get Audio Units versions of Mini Grand and XPand!2. Their customer service sent me to a different vending site based in a different country, who offered me the Xpand!2 module for $1 and the rest of their entire suite of instruments for another $75.

One dollar? Eight instruments for $76? I worried that I was being taken by an Estonian hacker who would soon identity thieve all of my info and take out three mortgages, but the important thing is I got my preferred piano back, as well as the orchestra hits. Now I can produce all of the 80s hair metal and 90s R&B. And joking aside, the XPand!2 module is a great tool because you can layer 4 different patches in one instance of the plug-in, with 2 internal effects busses so you don’t have to eat up mixer real estate with extra channels and faders (more on that later). Well worth the extra few bucks to bring over to Logic.

Screen Shot 2017-04-03 at 10.36.14 PM
Xpand!2 has so many orchestra hits they get their own category!

Aside from the above mentioned omissions, the instruments and samples packaged with Logic are an impressive lot, and give you much more flexibility than those bundled with Pro Tools. Logic has a diverse array of drum machine sounds compared to Pro Tools’ Boom drum machine, along with a variety of synth modules, a great B3 organ, electric piano (though I still prefer AIR’s Velvet), and even a Vocoder. If you’re trying to assemble a project studio from scratch you can’t beat the value of Logic at $199.

My favorite thing about working in Logic is the way it handles and displays MIDI data. When you double click on a MIDI region in Pro Tools it opens the region in the MIDI editor window, which is a separate window that opens on top of the arrange window, like a pop-up ad (and who doesn’t LOVE pop-up ads?). Double clicking a MIDI region in Logic opens an edit window in the bottom of the main arrange window, and you can easily move back and forth between the arrange timeline and the MIDI editing window. You can set up different tools for your cursor in the edit window and the arrange window so you don’t have to keep changing them for the different tasks you’ll be doing in the different areas. It feels like a much smoother workflow.

Logic’s MIDI editing window, which opens in the main application window.
Logic’s MIDI editing window, which opens in the main application window.

 

Pro Tools’ MIDI edit window, opened in s separate window on top of the arrange window.
Pro Tools’ MIDI edit window, opened in a separate window on top of the arrange window.

But what Logic giveth in smoothness it taketh back in the way it handles multiple takes of a track. I find it to be a mess compared to Pro Tools’ playlist structure. In Pro Tools, alternate takes are called “playlists” and you can punch into the current playlist much as you want. You can punch in each verse or, as I’ve had to do sometimes with rap vocals, every couple of lines. You can cobble together a take of the full song before you create a new playlist to start working on a new take. This gives you nice, full takes stacked vertically when it comes time to comp together the final vocal.

“playlist” view showing alternate takes with punched in recording regions
Pro Tools’ “playlist” view showing alternate takes with punched in recording regions

Logic, on the other hand, creates what it calls a “take folder” in your timeline and once you start punching in, every new take is stacked vertically. If you punch in every 2 lines, by the time your rapper has spit* (*I’m so hip) 16 bars you’ll have 8 takes stacked vertically in your take folder. If you want to record each of those 2 lines 4 times then, well, there’s math involved, but there’s a lot of files in a stack that you have to scroll through when it comes time to comp together the final vocal track.

Logic Audio Pro’s “Take Folder” showing punched regions stacked vertically
Logic Pro’s “Take Folder” showing punched regions stacked vertically

I also find Logic’s whole way of handling punch in recording more tedious than Pro Tools. In Pro Tools you simply highlight the section of audio you want to record over, hit record and the playhead starts 1 or 2 bars before the selection (depending on how you’ve set your count-in preference). In Logic you have to put the app into punch in mode and then select the range into which you want to punch, and then set the playhead manually to where you want to start playback. In fact, playhead placement in Logic has been a continuing pain in my bum since I switched. Pro Tools can be set to always go back to where the playhead was when you started recording or playing, which is great when trying to punch in a specific portion of a guitar solo because if you screw it up you can hit stop (or better yet Command-period to stop and delete the current recording), then hit record again and you’ll start back at the same place as the previous attempt. Logic, for some reason that probably makes sense to software engineers but not musicians, won’t reset the playhead. If you record a section, hit stop, then want to record that same section again you have to reset the playhead manually or use loop recording, which is a pain in a different ass because if you do nail the passage you have to rush to hit stop before the recording loops back and starts over.

Another Logical aggravation is the amount of channels that can pile up when you use premade instrument patches from the library. When you select a patch from the library it will enter your project with sends to reverbs, delays, and more, so what you thought would be one channel strip will take up 3–5. The drum machine presets are even crazier as you’ll get a channel for each sample (kick, snare, hi-hat, hand claps, etc.) in addition to busses and effects. I chose the “Neon” drum machine preset and found 32 channels buried in my mix window. Logic will fold them up into a “track stack” to keep them out of sight but I know they’re in there, unwanted, created against my will, messing with the feng shui of my mix window.

Yes, ALL of these channels entered the mix when I selected a drum machine preset!
Yes, ALL of these channels entered the mix when I selected a drum machine preset!

And then there are the administrative duties. Pro Tools handles files the way a desktop publishing application handles images, in that it doesn’t bring the audio file into the project, it uses a reference to the audio file to place the audio where it needs to be. The audio is stored in a separate audio folder which keeps the file size of a Pro Tools project very small. If you want to save alternate mixes of a project (which is always a good idea when dealing with indecisive clients, or indecisive me) you can save a copy of your project without eating up hard drive space because all you’re copying is the mix file, which is usually under 1 MB. When working in Pro Tools I save a mix every night and copy a new one at the start of the next day’s session. To get old files out of the way I can move old mixes into an “old mixes” folder for that project and can thus go back to every iteration the project has gone through. If I need to go back and reference an plug-in setting or EQ from an old mix, it’s there.

Logic, on the other hand, stores all of the audio in the main project file—technically a “package”—which results in a project file size that can range from 300MB to 1GB for a 3-minute pop tune. If you start saving copies you can eat up drive space pretty quickly. The solution Logic employs to save alternate mixes is to create a “Project Alternative” within the project file, which can be accessed via a dropdown menu under the file menu. This creates a disincentive to save your mixes every day because once you get to a bunch of project alternatives the drop down menu starts to look like the font menu in Word. There’s no way to move older mixes out of the way, as you could if you create an “old mixes” folder in which to dump Pro Tools project files. Your only option is to delete unwanted project alternatives, losing them forever.

So, was it worth it to switch? Despite my few specific grievances, yes. I needed to update the system software on my iMac, which would have required the $299 “license renewal” for Pro Tools, along with a $99 per year fee after the first year to receive updates, and another $500 or so to up- or crossgrade the amp modeling plug-in that would be rendered useless in the new setup. At $199 Logic has the same power with more plug-ins and free updates so I thought I should give it a try. I did have to repurchase the Melodyne plug-in from Celemony for pitch correction and waveform editing because the Logic flex pitch function just didn’t work well on correcting vocal pitch, so factor at least another $99 for the basic version of Melodyne (or $249 for a more robust version).

The important thing is that the music sounds just as good when I’m done working on it. I like the compressors and EQ plug-ins better in Logic, and I can deliver professional sounding .wav, .mp3s, or whatever format is needed. And now that I’ve updated my system software I can finally back up my phone.

Update: I also posted this article on Linkedin and Medium, because I’m taking my work to the people!

This Comedian Made a Fake Commercial Every Week For a Year and No One Really Gave Two S**ts

Comedian/musician Rob Paravonian has to fight through algorithms, pitches for ad buys, and an inundation of competing clickbait just to reach the thousands of fans he’s already made. Such is the current state of social media driving online “content.”

Paravonian is best known for his viral Pachelbel Rant video that made the rounds in the early days of YouTube and which has over 13 million views. He has just completed his year-long 52 Sellout project wherein he wrote, shot, edited, created music for, and posted a new commercial spoof each week. Though the series garnered a small following of devoted fans, it never really took off like his earlier viral hits. None of the videos broke through the Reddit/blogger/aggregator echo barrier and the two highest-viewed videos were reposts of existing commercials for which Paravonian created contrasting music for comedic effect.

When asked if he would have embarked on such an ambitious project if he knew the numbers would be so underwhelming Paravonian shot back “of course! I’m a comedian and a musician, what the ✄✄✄✄ else am I supposed to do?”

After his publicist convinced him to return to the table to complete the interview, Paravonian continued, “sorry. All of these media sites and reposters of comedy are only concerned with clicks and shares, and what’s actually being shared is secondary. It’s kind of frustrating.

“Not to mention that the algorithms are optimized for, well, bull✄✄✄t basically,” he adds, before veering off into a harangue about fake news being the fault of the people sharing it as much as the people making it.

“Back to the algorithms,” I intervene, “do you mean facebook?”

“They’re one example. They want to optimize the amount of clickable s✄✄t that you see, and they’d prefer it if that clickable s✄✄t was somehow still on their site so they can continue to feed you ads. And they actively suppress YouTube links which makes it really hard to get non-facebook-hosted videos to catch on.

“Which is maddening because I have a facebook page with nearly 5,000 ‘likes,’ which means nearly 5,000 people have taken the time to stop by my page and let me know they want to see my work and the links that I share. But every time I post a link facebook asks me if I want to ‘boost’ the post, meaning do I want to pay them money to reach the people that have already said they want to see my stuff? All the while they’re making money by feeding ads to the people that are looking at all the stuff I’ve already posted—with no cut of the ad money going to me, the person who’s creating the work that people are there to see.

“And YouTube? Hell, I have 26,000 subscribers and I’m lucky if I get 300 people to see a new video. No one really knows what metrics go into their recommendation algorithm, though a lot of people have guesses. Some say the biggest factor is watch time, some say it’s how many subscribers watch in the first day. If it’s watch time I’m screwed because all of these commercials are about 1-minute long. I think next year I’m gonna be one of those vloggers who just sits around overreacting to the normal world around me.”

“So, you’re going to be the next React To guy, or maybe the next Pewtie Poo?” I ask.

“Oh, god no. I’m kidding. I came up at a time when we were trying to make art. Not “Art” as a pretentious, museum kind of thing, but art as in something from your soul that has a point of view and tries to communicate to other people.”

“Is there room for ‘art’ in a world of content?” I ask.

“That’s a good f✄✄✄ing question, I’m not sure. If I were a Magic 8 Ball I’d say ‘outlook not good.’”

Despite his frustration with the current workings of the online mediaspace, when asked if he considers the project a failure Paravonian is quick to say no.

“It’s not a failure because I did some really good work. I pushed myself to try different things, I created work I never would have made otherwise, and I put a lot of good ‘content’” he says, with the most sardonic air quotes ever seen, “out into the world, and it’ll still be there tomorrow.”

To date the 52 videos in the series have over 123,000 views on YouTube, 90,000 coming from the two videos in which Paravonian changed the music of an existing commercial (The Amazon Lion Dog ad and the Bacardi house-on-a-truck ad). Another two videos were cross-posted on facebook where they received 3,900 additional views.

 

June 3rd

I don’t keep track of a lot of dates, but June 3rd sticks in my mind because in 1996 it was the day I moved to NYC, which means today marks 20 years since I took a flight from Chicago and a bus from LaGuardia to get to a 3-month sublet in Hell’s Kitchen. And though I didn’t do anything intentional to celebrate the occasion I spent the day finishing up a packet of songs and sketches for a potential gig, recording my own music in my studio, and discovering that my YouTube channel (which I obviously didn’t have in 1996) just hit 20 million views. Not bad.

In these 20 years I met a lot of wonderful people through the performing world and had a lot of great experiences, not the least of which are:

  • Opening a dozen shows for George Carlin
  • Opening for Lily Tomlin at the MGM in Las Vegas
  • Doing a 2 week tour in Afghanistan performing for members of the armed services at military bases
  • Completing my goal of spending at least one day in every state
  • Appearing on Comedy Central
  • Making the Dr. Demento Funny Five and Funny 25
  • Putting out 4 albums of music
  • Having a performance piece about my distaste for a certain Baroque piece of music go viral and lead to so many fun and interesting encounters and opportunities
  • Being in a concert film

Shoot, I could go on and on. And though I’m not a household name, nor rich, I feel I’ve gotten better and better at mixing comedy, music, and performance in a way that’s true to who I am and what I believe. Last year I wrote a musical which I hope you all will see and hear someday and I still thoroughly enjoy making people laugh with jokes, music and lyrics.

Thank you to everyone who’s been part of this experience, my good friends in and out of comedy, my family—both immediate and extended—and everyone who’s come to shows, watched online, and enjoyed what I do.

Yours in rock,
RobP

Free Chris Christie: The Musical!

We isolated the audio of Chris Christie’s inner monologue the night of Super Tuesday as he watched Trump give his victory speech. It’s a sappy Broadway ballad! Here at RobPRocks HQ we’ve amplified that audio and set it to some lovely animated photos of the event. We hope you enjoy it!

O.K., actually it’s a song I wrote as a demo for a comedy news website and I started putting some pictures together to give them an example of what I thought could be done with it visually. As the midnight hour came and went I was finishing the video but losing perspective, hitting that point in the project at which you wonder if it even makes sense anymore. But since it was a topical subject I posted it on my facebook page anyway, around 2 am last Friday, to see what people thought. Luckily some of my west coast friends were up and able to check it out right away and they not only liked it but started sharing it right away.

The arrangement is pretty simple, just piano and vocal, which is something I hadn’t tried until I wrote the song “Flashback Wife.” I’ve been playing and writing on keyboard a lot more lately, since working on my musical last year, and it’s been a lot of fun to explore this new (for me) area. I hope you like the results!

© Paravonian