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Logic Pro: Using Automation Patterns in Your Songs

Check out our Logic Pro: Logic TNT 3 Tips and Tricks: Reloaded course!

In today’s world of electronic music composition, automation is used for much more than simply controlling the volume of your tracks. Nearly every parameter you can think of can be controlled through automation like pitch, LFO rate, filter cutoff, resonance, EQ, panning and more. Creating rhythmic patterns with automation can add life and texture to your songs. Wouldn’t it be nice if there was a library of pre-made automation shapes you could drop in on your tracks?

When I’m producing, I’ll often pull from a small library of shapes I’ve made and saved into a Logic Project. I can easily copy these pre-made patterns into my existing songs because they’ve been saved inside a standard region. This also makes it easy to stretch or compress the automation ...but we’ll cover that in just a bit!

library of shapes


I’ve included a Logic Project called Automation Pattern Library. Download the project first. In this article I’ll show you how easy it is to get these into your songs, and what you can do with them...


Step 1 - Copy the automation

Open the Automation Shape Logic Template and copy the region of your choice with Command-C, then click back into the song you’ll be adding the automation to.


Step 2 - Create a clone of the track

Click the track of the instrument/audio track you want to add the automation to, then from the Track menu, select “New with Same Channel Strip/Instrument.” This is a cool function that not many people use. It clones the selected track, but doesn’t actually make a new one. It’s still the exact same track you started with, but now you have a new lane to add things like automation in our case.

New with Same Channel Strip/Instrument


Step 3 - Paste the automation

After you create the new track, place the timeline where you’d like the automation to start, and Command-V to paste it.

Paste the Automation


Step 4 - Repeat the automation

The automation only lasts one bar, but I want the automation to last 4 bars. I’ll copy it by Option-Click-Dragging the region 3 times.

Option-Click-Dragging the region 3 times


Step 5 - Convert automation to track based

So I can re-assign the automation to any parameter of my choice, I need to get the automation out of region based automation, and into track based automation. Select the 4 regions (or however many you have), and select Track > Track Automation > Move Visible Region Data to Track Automation.

Track > Track Automation > Move Visible Region Data to Track Automation


Step 6 - Toggle to view the automation

Now press A on your Mac’s keyboard to toggle Track Automation. The automation contained in the region is volume, but we’ll be changing that in just a moment. You’ll notice that both the original track and the new one you created have the same automation of them... this clearly reveals the nature of the “New with same Channel Strip/Instrument” track. It really is, just a clone of the track above it.

 Track Automation


Step 7 - Convert automation to another parameter

Now let’s re-assign the automation to a different parameter. Click one of the track’s automation selection menus while holding the Option key. Continue to hold the key until you find the parameter you’d like to copy the automation to, then select it. A window will appear asking if you’d like to only convert, or copy and convert. Select “Convert.” The automation shape is now converted to your parameter of choice!

Convert automation


Step 8 - Time stretch the automation

Now let’s say you’ve decided that the pattern is too fast and you’d like it to play back slower. First make sure the automation selection menu is displaying the correct automation, then go back to the empty regions and select them. Merge the regions together with key command Control-= first, then select Track > Track Automation > Move Visible Track Automation to Region. This will place the automation back inside them. 

Track > Track Automation > Move Visible Track Automation to Region


Now drag the region out while holding the Option key and the automation data will be time stretched to the length you choose.

Hold Option to time stretch automation


Hope you enjoyed the article!



Check out our Logic Pro: Logic TNT 3 Tips and Tricks: Reloaded course!

Darren Burgos

Darren Burgos | Articles by this author

Darren started making music on computers when he was a teenager in 1987. His first computer was an Amiga, and when he realized the power of computer-based production, his addiction for making electronic music began. Darren switched to Mac in 1994 and started using Logic Pro. He's been involved in many music projects over the years including Psychoid. For two years Darren travelled with Apple showing Logic Pro to visitors of Macworld, NAMM, Remix Hotel and NAB. Currently, he teaches a class in L.A. on electronic music production using Logic for Logic Pro Help. Darren also runs two small businesses on Mixing, Mastering and Logic Pro training and support.

Comments

Oct 15, 2012
vibrance
great tutorial- I get it all except the time stretching.

If you just copy the region with automation into a track and option drag it, it stretches the region but not the automation inside. What am I missing?

thanks
Oct 15, 2012
Darren Burgos
Cool! Glad you like it. :) Make sure to pull the automation BACK into the region before Option - Click - Dragging. Click the region you want to contain the automation, click the local Track menu, then Track Automation, and select "Move Visible Track Automation to Region." That should do it ...once it back inside the region, the Option - Click - Drag should stretch the automation too.
Oct 15, 2012
lostinthesound
Darren,

Words cannot express how grateful I am for not only the fantastic tutorial, but the invaluable project file! My production partner and I are automation junkies, so this "library" will save us loads of time with regards to drawing basic automation. We've often dreamed of a built-in shape library similar to Massive's Performer and hope that the fine folks at Apple will include it in Logic X when it's finally released sometime in the next 100 years. :-)

Cheers!
Oct 15, 2012
Darren Burgos
Hi Lostinthesound, that is great to hear! I appreciate your response so much, and yes, this could be an amazing feature added to the next Logic. Let's hope they read this! :)
Jan 06, 2013
Mat Monteiro
Cool Darren! Thanks a lot.
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