By popular demand, I decided to make my Logical Editor recipes available to all of you for FREE here: www.domsigalas.com/store/cubase-logical-editor-commands-pack-14-useful-recipes Since there is no specific way to import these to Cubase, please read the instructions, but you might have to do some research on where to copy them on your specific system (which is the reason why I didn't share in the first place!). Enjoy and feel free to modify those and make them your own. Cheers, Dom
Dom, my Monogram setup is en route and will arrive any day now. I cannot wait to map Cubase Logical Editor actions and key commands to my new Monogram buttons and wheels. I used the discount code you gave us - much appreciated. I think it goes without saying that if you go nuts mapping cmds to your Monogram controllers, every creative on the planet would love a video on it …
Hi Dom, Thank you for your sharing, the installation went well in Cubabase 10.5 but the color change doesn't work. Do you think colorization doesn't work because I'm on version 10.5?
Can't tell you how much I appreciate what you're doing. For a long time, I felt that I made the wrong choice with Cubase, but thanks to your videos, I see that I've made the best choice. In fact, after watching your video on Cubase 11 yesterday, I upgraded to it without the usual hesitation I've gone through in the past. Thanks so much for your generosity. And yes, I found the logical editor quite daunting and haven't used it. That changes today.
Are you kidding? 😊 Cubase is a gift from heaven and a lot of professional producers and film composers use it. It's the number one competitor to pro tools and it's the primary choice of most solo/home studio professional producers. (You don't know what you have! 😄)
Dear Dom, I knew about the logical editor. My music computering teacher, back in France, in the Conservatory I was, was teaching us Cubase. I'm using the Logical editor, as an Orchestal mockup and movie composer, to add some "real player randomness" to midi events (like, +10/-10 velocity, +10/-10 ticks in positioning). I'm also having it for "rainbow colorize" my tracks (you select a track, then start the logical editor, and boom, every following track after the one you select is colored with the last color+1. It's beautiful. I'm also using the hide empty tracks when my 5000 tracks (midi, Audio, VCA, FX all together) Orchestal template is a bit heavy to handle. And at the end of a project, to relieve my computer, I'm using the delete empty track command. Of course, all of this put in macros !
Logical Editor been around ever since the Atari days, and its SOOO usefull when working with midi events, like when you fast create a static drum track on your keybed/controller using fixed velocities and timings .. this is not very interesting, but you only have to make a couple of logic presets once, and all you have to do to is press a couple keys to make it "groovey. You can randomize the timings like eg. +/- 5 on eg. hat events, randomize the velocities for certain of beat events, etc. etc. It will take a bit of foot work, but can make your life so much easier. If you often get midi material from clients or your own fast recorded stuff and need to match it to certain software instruments you use, you can very fast get a horrible played midi track that doesn't match your instrument very good to be straightened out so it triggers eg the different sample layers in a useful way. The logic editor is more powerful than most people think, no its not a python/lua script but for most jobs it has enough power to speed up some very cumbersome manual editing, or complete re-recordings to have a useful project in half an hour that would otherwise have taken hours to clean up manually in event/key editor, like straightening or thinning out cc's. It might look cumbersome for some, but it is exactly like Dom shows here pretty "Logical" .. pun intended :) to use. The idea of the Logical Editor goes back to the 80'ies. Its designed as a intermediate advanced power tool without being a Swiss army knife like Python/Lua that not all will have the technical knowledge or interest in to learn.
I actually had this issue today. Had a client listen to the mix and ask that the programmed drums rimshot snare hits be a little more varied. I went back and drew in the changes... but would've been a life saver to just highlight them and apply off-beat changes!! Genius!
And boom, Dom did it again!!! Mate, we just can't thank you enough for what are you doing with your videos. You're not just saving so much of our time, but also you're making us an army of pro (but not tools 🤣) Cheers from Italy
The logical editor has always seemed very intimidating to me, this video made it make sense, and gave me ideas on how I can utilize it in my own workflow. Thanks for being amazing as you always are, Dom!
Very good. I use the logical editor all the time to quickly remove very short random glitches from my Midi Guitar input. Saves me tons of editing time.
When Dom starts going and it's not even related to actual music production creativity, he still makes it worth watching -- there's always something to learn. Between Cubase and AutoDesk 3Ds Max I'm not sure which software program is more amazing. I knew about this feature but Dom, you are right, it looked too complicated to use until this video. Thanks again!!!!
Wow - I've been a cubase user for 25 years odd and started this video expecting to learn nothing. I use the logical editor. But the colouring is awesome! Thank you. Cubase is such a wonderful program where you can achieve the same result in many different ways some are just better than others. Your method is better than mine! :) Thank you for sharing
never knew about it but really really excited to master this. Thanks Dom. Just upgraded from Mojave to Monterey, and 10.5 Pro to 12 Pro. No hitches and really excited. Very excitable person. I really appreciate your videos......
Dom, as usual, another fantastic tutorial!! I love watching all the videos put out by you and Chris. All this information really helps all of us. Thanks so much!!
Thank you so much. You have no idea how much I appreciate the great work you do to make Cubase Pro more useable. I just set up an Inserts Bypass macro and accidentally deleted it. Your macro is much better.
Hey guys. Dom's presets work great-thanx heaps Dom. On my PC I added the folder to C:\\Users\\your\_username\*\\AppData\\Roaming\\Steinberg\\Cubase 11_64\\Presets\\Project Logical Editor. I saved a test preset from logical editor & searched for the folder that it was saved into after having trouble pasting Dom's folder into the correct place. :)
Thanks Dom, I knew about the Logical Editor but didn't use it, now I know it will save me tons of precious minutes ... and since time is money, your video was much valuable :) Thanks for all your tutorials and tricks about Cubase !
This was my first time seeing the Logical Editor in action!! I had no idea. Been using Cubase for almost 5-6 years and didn't know that this existed. Super helpful!! The one with the automatic colouring that you did really blew me away. Love the energy and love the videos, as always! Cheers Dom!
Thank you very much Dom for the free Logical Editor recipes. This is very useful, few clicks then Booommm! It really saves massive time. 👏👏👏👍👍I’m now using your free recipes in my workflow. I will also make my own recipes.
oh my God! I've been using cubase since beta till now, and I always afraid to look inside of logical editor. thank you so much, this is the most useful info I've ever watch! looking forward for your next stunning sharing.
You are really showing people the magic of Cubase. Oh gosh… I use the logical editor for all kinds of things…. Removing certain sysex messages. Batch Changing pitch, randomizing velocities, randomizing positions, (for certain plugins that have expressions) adding expressions for certain notes. I would not be a useful producer without this feature. Cubase has so many great features. I usually have all tracks that are bused together in a group track in the same folder. And then I have a track color scheme for the different elements of a song. Drums are red, vocals are purple, vocal effects are light blue. Cubase is really the best DAW.
First time using Logical Editor following this video, And really felt that "BOOM" :) Such a great feature, definitely will use it again, will learn how to... Thank you so much for opening that door.
Hi Dom, never used Logical Editor before but it looks great I learn so much from your videos. So first thing you do is colorise tracks which captures key words but you might then colorise additional tracks which are not caught by the word filter. Rather than adding everything to the word list, it would be quicker to do other commands based on the colour of the tracks. So workflow - colour all drums red - manually colorise tracks named things not on word list (eg, tabla, doomkick, etc) - then additional commands that are against drum tracks use 'Color Name - Equal - Color 1' then every command doesn't need the word list updating every time you add a new word to capture you just do it once. I'm sure there may be some reason why this is not a way to do it, but it just seems to make it more maintainable if the colour of the track is the key element.
I've been using the PLE to automatically colour all my tracks for a couple of years now. I have a macro to do all the different groups at once and programmed that to a button on my midi controller to make it even easier. Works like a dream.
Setting up a touch screen with OSC to control these commands, next level. I need to look into this and how to do it. One press on a s custom screen, it'll be crazy....
I honestly stayed away from the logical editor for years because it's not intuitive. But I am going to give it another try because what you showed us is just awesome. Thanks so much 😊🙏😊🙏
I have been using it here and there, but just three or four presets I found useful. Didn’t think though it can prove such an effective housekeeping tool as well. Good stuff thanks 🙏
The Logical Editor has been something I've always really wanted to use. Understanding the editor is a high climb and involves lots of trial and error. Your free recipes are going to be studied in depth soon. Thank you. The Claps instrument you offer is VERY intriguing.
what a fantastic video dom, thank you very much, i´m using the logical editor all the time for midi related tasks, but i would have never thought of using it to color code and put my channels into folders, wow, what a time-saver, thanks for the inspiration!!
I'm a Nuendo user and I have heard about the PLE before, but never really dive into it cause at first it did look intimidating and the tutorials I've seen before didn't really explained it with such ease. So thank you! :D
This video is on par with the Why use the Control Room video. It will probably have the same result as me using it all the time. I came across the Logical Editor in the past, but never explored it.
I use it regularly to manipulate midinodes. A trick I use is to take a copy of, say, a bass line and convert the notes to Control Changes. I then send them to a synth so I can manipulate a parameter, node by node. Half and double tempo is absolutely indispensable.
I use the Logical Editor for all sorts of things. Great tool, but it would be great if it wasn't just displayed in a separate window, but also integrated as a panel at the bottom, like the Mix Console or Accord Pad. If you could then configure the individual commands as macro buttons with shortcuts, it would be even better. Great Work, Dom.
I use the Logical Editor to move the first note of every bar (when audio click is converted to midi) to a different midi note, so the drummer can hear a cowbell as beat one. This saves me heaps of time. I will start using it more; especially with the pack you have done for us. Thank you very much Dom :)
Yes I’ve known about logical editor from its first Introduction to Cubase. I had a very small dabble over the years. I started using more of the logical presets in the drop down menu. This video now has inspired me to set up a couple of presets now. Thanks Dom.
Very Powerful tool and this Tutorial is great Dom! All you're video's are top notch👊🏾 i definitely gonna use the Logical editor now. Thank's Dom for all the support. And Cubase Pro 12 is running very smooth.
Dom, this was much needed. I've been using the Project Logical Editor, but haven't gone as deep. This demonstration has definitely shown how intricate we can get with it. THANKS!!!
The logical editor is powerful - up to a point. But getting the level of control you need with just one level of and/or is tricky. I wish Cubase supported an actual scripting language like Python or Lua so we could really automate production.
@@Thisninjascared Yes, I'm serious. REAPER has scripting, CUBASE does not. REAPER is also infinitely customisable. With CUBASE, you're stuck with the way Steinberg made it... ;-) I have used Cubase from the start, running on an Atari ST. I took the decision to use REAPER for very practical reasons and I'm glad I did.
Another thing to note is that you can actually create Key Commands to trigger these Logical Editor presets, or take it even further and create a Key Command that can perform a chain of Logical Editor functions such as coloring all the tracks at the same time.
That's a really great idea! Also you can take things even further. . . . Use Cubase Generic Remote to map something like a Korg nanoPAD to the Logical editor Presets that you use the most. . . . Device: "Command" -----> Channel/Category: "Process Logical Preset" -----> Value/Action: [choose the preset from the dropdown list] :) (You can use any cheap midi pad for this but if you use the nanoPAD then you can even use the scenes function to create groups of pad presets).
@@Wellness-Wanderer here's a trick most people don't know. Not only can you map MIDI to these functions (like you mentioned); you can also map MIDI to virtual banks of MIDI in Cubase. You can use a single MIDI controller to control many Logical Editor presets and chains simply by creating virtual MIDI banks in Cubase. Cubase is just that beastly of a DAW.
Hey Dom - This is great. I used the Logical Editor Waaaaay back. I'm not sure if, at that time, it could select tracks and audio, etc, but I used it to perform extreme functions on MIDI data 😀 Didn't know it could do all this stuff! Cheers 👍
Thanks Dom. I've watched several videos on this subject and never really understood how to be a creative user, but the way you explain it I now have a much better understanding of how to go about achieving tasks with this tool. Thanks again!
there’s tons of Cubase features which I don’t know of or have never used yet (like regions, or marker tracks). The Logical Editor however has been something I loved already in the early 90s on my old Atari ST ... and was one of the reasons why I never changed to another DAW
That's one of Cubase's strength. There simply isn't any other DAW on the market that has better midi support. Logical editor, Event editor, iterativ Quantize .. etc. No other DAW has as powerfull Quantize and midi editing functions than Cubase. But after all Steinberg also pretty much defined the whole standards of computer based Midi sequencing thing back in the 80'ies. I really tried to learn Studio One as I got it with an interface, and its a great DAW and very tight integrated with Presonus mixers and interfaces, but I simply couldn't get used to it's midi handling. Too much I missed from Cubase.
you are a guru mate ! love ya videos and all the stuff you shared every time its like going to school but i cant wait to get there keep it up mate 10/10
Hey, Dom, love your vids. One I'd like to see you do is how to use the time signature track CORRECTLY (e.g. change from 4/4 to 3/4 and back to 4/4 later). Every time I do it I have to re-learn some time-consuming workaround.
Hi Dom! This is brilliant thank you so much love all your videos. Here is an idea for a video: When you have to work on a different computer in a different studio, how do you prepare Cubase for your workflow? What do you copy from your own computer that you know you'll need on a different machine? Key commands, preferences, presets etc... It can be easy to miss something. In that regard maybe you could also talk about the way you organise your own cubase and third party presets. Do you put all your own presets, regardless of the manufacurer, in a folder that you made or do you stick with default paths? Boring topic but It can be so easy to get lost. I feel Cubase preset management is confusing and overwhelming. I still haven't found a system I'm happy with for these issues and it can be a real creativity killer.
There's a shortcut add track to selected: Group channel I use (ctrl alt g) and it creates a group for any track I select, same with folders (ctrl alt f)
Yes but you have to select the channel first. With this you let Cubase do everything for you- select all guitars, paint them green, place them to a group and a folder. You don’t have to select anything yourself- especially if your drums etc are scattered in a super busy project ;)
Just fantastic Dom. This video has really inspired me to use the Project Logical Editor. I have seen Greg Ondo use this many times in his forums, however, it looked to be one very complicated beast! But not now. Thank you.
By popular demand, I decided to make my Logical Editor recipes available to all of you for FREE here: www.domsigalas.com/store/cubase-logical-editor-commands-pack-14-useful-recipes
Since there is no specific way to import these to Cubase, please read the instructions, but you might have to do some research on where to copy them on your specific system (which is the reason why I didn't share in the first place!).
Enjoy and feel free to modify those and make them your own.
Cheers,
Dom
Hey man, can u send me details about your lighting? Id love to get the same lighting in my studio !
Yaaaaaaaaaaahhhhh!!! Happy day!!! Thk you, bro!!!
Dom, my Monogram setup is en route and will arrive any day now. I cannot wait to map Cubase Logical Editor actions and key commands to my new Monogram buttons and wheels. I used the discount code you gave us - much appreciated. I think it goes without saying that if you go nuts mapping cmds to your Monogram controllers, every creative on the planet would love a video on it …
I might be able to make an installer script for these.
Hi Dom,
Thank you for your sharing, the installation went well in Cubabase 10.5 but the color change doesn't work. Do you think colorization doesn't work because I'm on version 10.5?
Can't tell you how much I appreciate what you're doing. For a long time, I felt that I made the wrong choice with Cubase, but thanks to your videos, I see that I've made the best choice. In fact, after watching your video on Cubase 11 yesterday, I upgraded to it without the usual hesitation I've gone through in the past. Thanks so much for your generosity. And yes, I found the logical editor quite daunting and haven't used it. That changes today.
Trust Cubase Is the best daw hands down
Are you kidding? 😊 Cubase is a gift from heaven and a lot of professional producers and film composers use it. It's the number one competitor to pro tools and it's the primary choice of most solo/home studio professional producers. (You don't know what you have! 😄)
Dear Dom, I knew about the logical editor. My music computering teacher, back in France, in the Conservatory I was, was teaching us Cubase.
I'm using the Logical editor, as an Orchestal mockup and movie composer, to add some "real player randomness" to midi events (like, +10/-10 velocity, +10/-10 ticks in positioning). I'm also having it for "rainbow colorize" my tracks (you select a track, then start the logical editor, and boom, every following track after the one you select is colored with the last color+1. It's beautiful.
I'm also using the hide empty tracks when my 5000 tracks (midi, Audio, VCA, FX all together) Orchestal template is a bit heavy to handle. And at the end of a project, to relieve my computer, I'm using the delete empty track command. Of course, all of this put in macros !
One thing I use in Logical Editor regularly is to randomize velocities on off-beats for more realism on drums or ostinato string runs.
Interesting :-) Could you "show" us how please ? Thanks
Logical Editor been around ever since the Atari days, and its SOOO usefull when working with midi events, like when you fast create a static drum track on your keybed/controller using fixed velocities and timings .. this is not very interesting, but you only have to make a couple of logic presets once, and all you have to do to is press a couple keys to make it "groovey. You can randomize the timings like eg. +/- 5 on eg. hat events, randomize the velocities for certain of beat events, etc. etc. It will take a bit of foot work, but can make your life so much easier. If you often get midi material from clients or your own fast recorded stuff and need to match it to certain software instruments you use, you can very fast get a horrible played midi track that doesn't match your instrument very good to be straightened out so it triggers eg the different sample layers in a useful way. The logic editor is more powerful than most people think, no its not a python/lua script but for most jobs it has enough power to speed up some very cumbersome manual editing, or complete re-recordings to have a useful project in half an hour that would otherwise have taken hours to clean up manually in event/key editor, like straightening or thinning out cc's. It might look cumbersome for some, but it is exactly like Dom shows here pretty "Logical" .. pun intended :) to use. The idea of the Logical Editor goes back to the 80'ies. Its designed as a intermediate advanced power tool without being a Swiss army knife like Python/Lua that not all will have the technical knowledge or interest in to learn.
Can you stil do it in the new version? I can't find it anymore ...
I actually had this issue today. Had a client listen to the mix and ask that the programmed drums rimshot snare hits be a little more varied. I went back and drew in the changes... but would've been a life saver to just highlight them and apply off-beat changes!! Genius!
And boom, Dom did it again!!! Mate, we just can't thank you enough for what are you doing with your videos. You're not just saving so much of our time, but also you're making us an army of pro (but not tools 🤣) Cheers from Italy
BECAUSE OF YOUR DETAILED VIDEOS I AM A FAITHFUL CUBASE USER FOR MANY YEARS AND ENJOY LEARNING MORE AND MORE BY WATCHING YOUR VIDEOS!! THANKS SO MUCH!!
The logical editor has always seemed very intimidating to me, this video made it make sense, and gave me ideas on how I can utilize it in my own workflow. Thanks for being amazing as you always are, Dom!
I'm starting to use Cubase LE 13 and I'm learning how to use the Project Logical : Bim Bam Boom !
This is AWESOME insight for all us Cubase geeks around & Thanks millions Dom for another killer lesson... God Bless & Cheers.... :)
Very good. I use the logical editor all the time to quickly remove very short random glitches from my Midi Guitar input. Saves me tons of editing time.
When Dom starts going and it's not even related to actual music production creativity, he still makes it worth watching -- there's always something to learn. Between Cubase and AutoDesk 3Ds Max I'm not sure which software program is more amazing. I knew about this feature but Dom, you are right, it looked too complicated to use until this video. Thanks again!!!!
Excellent! I learned earlier today that the Logical Editor is the best way to edit track names after rendering virtual instruments.
Have used the midi logical editor, but never the project logical editor. Thanks so much for the heads up!
After recently getting back into music creation and buying Cubase, these vids are gold. Well done Dom, very much appreciated. 🤟
Wow - I've been a cubase user for 25 years odd and started this video expecting to learn nothing. I use the logical editor. But the colouring is awesome! Thank you.
Cubase is such a wonderful program where you can achieve the same result in many different ways some are just better than others. Your method is better than mine! :) Thank you for sharing
Thanks a lot Dom! This video is incredibly useful and thank you very much for also providing us the xlm file.
never knew about it but really really excited to master this. Thanks Dom. Just upgraded from Mojave to Monterey, and 10.5 Pro to 12 Pro. No hitches and really excited. Very excitable person. I really appreciate your videos......
Another top video another top tutorial... Many many many thanks Dom !!!
Cubase is the best Daw, and YOU are the best Cubase Guru !
Dom, as usual, another fantastic tutorial!! I love watching all the videos put out by you and Chris. All this information really helps all of us. Thanks so much!!
Dom, this is Amazing. I have been a Cubase user since the year 2000 and I have never used it. OMG, this is great. I will be using this from now on!
Thank you so much. You have no idea how much I appreciate the great work you do to make Cubase Pro more useable. I just set up an Inserts Bypass macro and accidentally deleted it. Your macro is much better.
i appreciate that you have a more inviting dressing and surrounding . Thanks and Blessings!!!
Hey guys. Dom's presets work great-thanx heaps Dom. On my PC I added the folder to C:\\Users\\your\_username\*\\AppData\\Roaming\\Steinberg\\Cubase 11_64\\Presets\\Project Logical Editor. I saved a test preset from logical editor & searched for the folder that it was saved into after having trouble pasting Dom's folder into the correct place. :)
Damn! That colour coding trick is AMAZING! I wish I knew this earlier. Awesome, I will use this all the time now! Thanks Dom! You're awesome :)
I've used it and played around with it, but never got a real grip on it.
This video has clarified a few more things. Thanks :)
Thank you for zooming in when you explain.
Dom, thank you for the templates! THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!
You’re welcome Jens :)
Thanks Dom, I knew about the Logical Editor but didn't use it, now I know it will save me tons of precious minutes ... and since time is money, your video was much valuable :)
Thanks for all your tutorials and tricks about Cubase !
This was my first time seeing the Logical Editor in action!! I had no idea. Been using Cubase for almost 5-6 years and didn't know that this existed. Super helpful!! The one with the automatic colouring that you did really blew me away. Love the energy and love the videos, as always! Cheers Dom!
Thank you very much Dom for the free Logical Editor recipes. This is very useful, few clicks then Booommm! It really saves massive time. 👏👏👏👍👍I’m now using your free recipes in my workflow. I will also make my own recipes.
Amazing!!! I have to start using this feature A LOT more, since it´s a real time-saver as you said, Dome. Thanks a lot for your great videos!!
oh my God! I've been using cubase since beta till now, and I always afraid to look inside of logical editor. thank you so much, this is the most useful info I've ever watch! looking forward for your next stunning sharing.
You are really showing people the magic of Cubase. Oh gosh… I use the logical editor for all kinds of things…. Removing certain sysex messages. Batch Changing pitch, randomizing velocities, randomizing positions, (for certain plugins that have expressions) adding expressions for certain notes. I would not be a useful producer without this feature. Cubase has so many great features. I usually have all tracks that are bused together in a group track in the same folder. And then I have a track color scheme for the different elements of a song. Drums are red, vocals are purple, vocal effects are light blue. Cubase is really the best DAW.
This is a fantastic time saver and essential to music production organization. Great job Dom
In postproduction the renaming options for eg cycle markers with this logical editor is a lifesaver !
This was Great!! Looking forward to all of your workshops.
Love it. This struck a chord. Thanks Dom!
I love the logical editor. I have a 'humanize midi' preset i use that sets random velocity +/- 7, and offsets timing +/- 5. one click EZ
First time using Logical Editor following this video, And really felt that "BOOM" :) Such a great feature, definitely will use it again, will learn how to... Thank you so much for opening that door.
TOP STUFF MATE, LOVE YOUR TIPS...Work flow is greater with your knowledge
Wow, it's mind blowing ! Thank you so much, Dom !
Wow super nice! The Logical Editor is a real time saver👌
Hi Dom, never used Logical Editor before but it looks great I learn so much from your videos. So first thing you do is colorise tracks which captures key words but you might then colorise additional tracks which are not caught by the word filter. Rather than adding everything to the word list, it would be quicker to do other commands based on the colour of the tracks. So workflow - colour all drums red - manually colorise tracks named things not on word list (eg, tabla, doomkick, etc) - then additional commands that are against drum tracks use 'Color Name - Equal - Color 1' then every command doesn't need the word list updating every time you add a new word to capture you just do it once. I'm sure there may be some reason why this is not a way to do it, but it just seems to make it more maintainable if the colour of the track is the key element.
I've been using the PLE to automatically colour all my tracks for a couple of years now. I have a macro to do all the different groups at once and programmed that to a button on my midi controller to make it even easier. Works like a dream.
Actually having all these functions on a controller is way time saving.
Setting up a touch screen with OSC to control these commands, next level. I need to look into this and how to do it. One press on a s custom screen, it'll be crazy....
😱once again thank you for your work, you are an educator my friend. I hope Steinberg really appreciate you as much as we do.
Thank you, Dom! I was my suggestion to made this video)
Thank you ! Brother for sharing your knowledge with us !🙏
I honestly stayed away from the logical editor for years because it's not intuitive. But I am going to give it another try because what you showed us is just awesome. Thanks so much 😊🙏😊🙏
First time Dom i never was aware of it. Thanks!
Thanks Dom, great video. You are a wealth of knowledge!
Awesome feature! I'm a pretty lite user, but can see some neat uses for naming, coloring, grouping, etc. Thanks!
Your tutorial that I deserve the most from any teacher
I have been using it here and there, but just three or four presets I found useful. Didn’t think though it can prove such an effective housekeeping tool as well. Good stuff thanks 🙏
The Logical Editor has been something I've always really wanted to use. Understanding the editor is a high climb and involves lots of trial and error. Your free recipes are going to be studied in depth soon. Thank you. The Claps instrument you offer is VERY intriguing.
what a fantastic video dom, thank you very much, i´m using the logical editor all the time for midi related tasks, but i would have never thought of using it to color code and put my channels into folders, wow, what a time-saver, thanks for the inspiration!!
Thank you for saving us TONS of time!!!!
I'm a Nuendo user and I have heard about the PLE before, but never really dive into it cause at first it did look intimidating and the tutorials I've seen before didn't really explained it with such ease. So thank you! :D
This video is on par with the Why use the Control Room video. It will probably have the same result as me using it all the time. I came across the Logical Editor in the past, but never explored it.
I use it regularly to manipulate midinodes. A trick I use is to take a copy of, say, a bass line and convert the notes to Control Changes. I then send them to a synth so I can manipulate a parameter, node by node. Half and double tempo is absolutely indispensable.
I use the Logical Editor for all sorts of things. Great tool, but it would be great if it wasn't just displayed in a separate window, but also integrated as a panel at the bottom, like the Mix Console or Accord Pad. If you could then configure the individual commands as macro buttons with shortcuts, it would be even better. Great Work, Dom.
Thanks for sharing. This was really the first time I came across it since I started using Cubase in 1999.
Thanks Dom, very helpful tips
damn! I've been using cubase since 2003 and am definitely going to start using this now, thankyou so much.
Efficiency Power right there!
I use the Logical Editor to move the first note of every bar (when audio click is converted to midi) to a different midi note,
so the drummer can hear a cowbell as beat one. This saves me heaps of time. I will start using it more; especially with the pack you have done for us. Thank you very much Dom :)
Great video Dom! 🙌🙌🙌
Thanks so much my man 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼❤️❤️❤️
I use it to hide/unhide the enable tracks on my 1200 tracks template. I love it!
I've looked into the PLE a bit before, but gave up at the complexity. Now I will definitely dive in! Thanks.
Yes I’ve known about logical editor from its first Introduction to Cubase. I had a very small dabble over the years. I started using more of the logical presets in the drop down menu. This video now has inspired me to set up a couple of presets now. Thanks Dom.
Thank you for the presets.Great video very helpful.This was my first time using the editor.I'm now a subscriber to your channel.Thank you.
Great video Dom. I really like the Bypass Insert Command. I assigned this command to the function #4 on my CC121. Works great.
Very Powerful tool and this Tutorial is great Dom! All you're video's are top notch👊🏾 i definitely gonna use the Logical editor now. Thank's Dom for all the support. And Cubase Pro 12 is running very smooth.
Dom, this was much needed. I've been using the Project Logical Editor, but haven't gone as deep. This demonstration has definitely shown how intricate we can get with it. THANKS!!!
Fantastic way to save time ! Thanks a lot
The logical editor is powerful - up to a point. But getting the level of control you need with just one level of and/or is tricky. I wish Cubase supported an actual scripting language like Python or Lua so we could really automate production.
I too wish that's available
That's why I moved to REAPER... ;-)
Dom has the ability to escalate this request to Steinberg. PLEASE Dom, Ask for midi event processing SCRIPTS.
@@elmo7sharp9 reaper over Cubase? Are you serious bruh?
@@Thisninjascared Yes, I'm serious.
REAPER has scripting, CUBASE does not.
REAPER is also infinitely customisable. With CUBASE, you're stuck with the way Steinberg made it... ;-)
I have used Cubase from the start, running on an Atari ST. I took the decision to use REAPER for very practical reasons and I'm glad I did.
You've helped me improve so much. You explain things so well and I feel less scared lol 😆 You rock man!
Another thing to note is that you can actually create Key Commands to trigger these Logical Editor presets, or take it even further and create a Key Command that can perform a chain of Logical Editor functions such as coloring all the tracks at the same time.
That's a really great idea! Also you can take things even further. . . . Use Cubase Generic Remote to map something like a Korg nanoPAD to the Logical editor Presets that you use the most. . . .
Device: "Command" -----> Channel/Category: "Process Logical Preset" -----> Value/Action: [choose the preset from the dropdown list] :)
(You can use any cheap midi pad for this but if you use the nanoPAD then you can even use the scenes function to create groups of pad presets).
@@Wellness-Wanderer here's a trick most people don't know. Not only can you map MIDI to these functions (like you mentioned); you can also map MIDI to virtual banks of MIDI in Cubase. You can use a single MIDI controller to control many Logical Editor presets and chains simply by creating virtual MIDI banks in Cubase. Cubase is just that beastly of a DAW.
@@chrisstaubyn That sounds interesting but I am not sure exactly what you mean. Could you possibly explain a bit more? Thanks in advance.
Absolutely fantastic, one of those features I just never bothered to get into, but dear lord how much time you can save!
Hey Dom - This is great. I used the Logical Editor Waaaaay back. I'm not sure if, at that time, it could select tracks and audio, etc, but I used it to perform extreme functions on MIDI data 😀 Didn't know it could do all this stuff! Cheers 👍
The only intro I watch entirely
Totally new to me! Great video as always Dom, thanks!!
Thanks Dom. I've watched several videos on this subject and never really understood how to be a creative user, but the way you explain it I now have a much better understanding of how to go about achieving tasks with this tool. Thanks again!
Hey this is a great video thanks Dom. Crazy about Cubase.
there’s tons of Cubase features which I don’t know of or have never used yet (like regions, or marker tracks). The Logical Editor however has been something I loved already in the early 90s on my old Atari ST ... and was one of the reasons why I never changed to another DAW
That's one of Cubase's strength. There simply isn't any other DAW on the market that has better midi support. Logical editor, Event editor, iterativ Quantize .. etc. No other DAW has as powerfull Quantize and midi editing functions than Cubase. But after all Steinberg also pretty much defined the whole standards of computer based Midi sequencing thing back in the 80'ies.
I really tried to learn Studio One as I got it with an interface, and its a great DAW and very tight integrated with Presonus mixers and interfaces, but I simply couldn't get used to it's midi handling. Too much I missed from Cubase.
I use Markers all the time with every project!
Soooooo useful! Thanks Dom!
MIND SUCCESSFULLY BLOWN! amazing!!!
WOW!! Echt der Hammer. Thank you for traveling with CUBASE and DOM
you are a guru mate ! love ya videos and all the stuff you shared every time its like going to school but i cant wait to get there keep it up mate 10/10
Wow! Had many aha moments! You explain it so well. Huge thanks!
This is awesome. I’m new to cubase and always find your video very helpful as well as fun to watch🎉🎉🎉
Hey, Dom, love your vids. One I'd like to see you do is how to use the time signature track CORRECTLY (e.g. change from 4/4 to 3/4 and back to 4/4 later). Every time I do it I have to re-learn some time-consuming workaround.
Hi Dom! This is brilliant thank you so much love all your videos.
Here is an idea for a video: When you have to work on a different computer in a different studio, how do you prepare Cubase for your workflow? What do you copy from your own computer that you know you'll need on a different machine?
Key commands, preferences, presets etc... It can be easy to miss something.
In that regard maybe you could also talk about the way you organise your own cubase and third party presets. Do you put all your own presets, regardless of the manufacurer, in a folder that you made or do you stick with default paths?
Boring topic but It can be so easy to get lost. I feel Cubase preset management is confusing and overwhelming. I still haven't found a system I'm happy with for these issues and it can be a real creativity killer.
I really enjoy your "BOOM". 😁☺️👍
Been using cubase for years and never knew what this did, definitely going to set it up, thanks mate for showing us the way......cheers
There's a shortcut add track to selected: Group channel
I use (ctrl alt g) and it creates a group for any track I select, same with folders (ctrl alt f)
Yes but you have to select the channel first. With this you let Cubase do everything for you- select all guitars, paint them green, place them to a group and a folder. You don’t have to select anything yourself- especially if your drums etc are scattered in a super busy project ;)
I have one to select all tracks and assign them to a new group track.
Just fantastic Dom. This video has really inspired me to use the Project Logical Editor. I have seen Greg Ondo use this many times in his forums, however, it looked to be one very complicated beast! But not now. Thank you.
Sweet glad I'm the 1 outta 10 cubase users who knew most of these but did learn something 🤘
Thank you so much, I had no idea how to work with the logic editor, now I just wanna try lots of things!
I love the logical editor! And I think the first version of cubase i used already had iit? Around 1991, on a Mac SE/30 or something like that...