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Hi. I’m a newbie to SD3. I have several songs I’ve already recorded in Logic X. They are audio files, without any midi. No drums. I’m want to bring the audio into SD3 and build some drum tracks for them. Is that possible? Thanks.
In short – no. Why not just keep the stuff you’ve already recorded in Logic and put SD3 on a track like you would any other VI (virtual instrument) and build your drum tracks there?
Jack
aka musicman691 on other forums
Superior Drummer 3.4.0
Area 33 1.0.0
Death and Darkness 1.0.1
PT 2021.6
OSX 10.13.6
3.46 GHz hex core 2012 MacPro 48 gig ram
You can use tracker to create midi from audio. It only works to certain degrees though. Try it and see. You could also mix the sounds in with the audio.
SD3 with older sdx,s plus Rooms of Hansa and Death & Darkness. Cubase and wavelab current versions. Roland TD50x using all trigger inputs for triggering SD3 only. Windows 11 computer. Various keyboards and outboard gear as well as VST instruments. Acoustic drums: Yamaha 9000 natural wood and Pearl masters. Various snare drums. RME BabyFace Pro FS and Adam A7X monitors
Please correct me if I’m wrong and maybe I’m misreading the OP
but it sounds like he’s got songs in Logic with no drums at all.
No MIDI drums. No audio drums.
I think that what he really wants the functionality of EZDrummer3’s Bandmate
to help him build drum parts…
or he could use Logic Pro 11’s Session Drummer to follow a track
Hi. I’m a newbie to SD3. I have several songs I’ve already recorded in Logic X. They are audio files, without any midi. No drums. I’m want to bring the audio into SD3 and build some drum tracks for them. Is that possible? Thanks.
Superior Drummer 3 version: 3.3.7
Operating system: macOS Sonoma (14)
Hi there,
Just to add to the conversation. The first thing I would ask is: Did you record everything else to a click track?
Scott’s suggestion is a good suggestion.
Use Logic’s session drummer to follow the track and trigger SD3 samples. Full disclosure, I am not a Logic Pro user, but there are plenty around here to help out.
Mac Studio M1 Max, RAM 64 GB, 1TB Drive, OSX 12.x/13.x and Windows 10 (VM)
DAW: Studio One Pro (always up to date)
DTX Express III (Extreme triggers), Nektar LX88
OWC Thunderbay Mini (4 X 1TB Sata SSD), Express 4M2 (4 X 2TB M.2 SSD), Envoy Express (1TB M.2 SSD)
Presonus Quantum, Faderport & Faderport 8
Black Lion Sparrow Mk2 A/D, FMR-RNP-RNC, MIDI Xpress 128, BM5A, KRK VXT4, Equator D5
2020 Macbook Pro 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD Audio(mobile rig)
I would agree with Brad that a quick and easy way to add some drums to your song is by using the Session Player. If all of your audio has been recorded into separate tracks, your drum track can follow any of the recorded tracks.
if it is a single audio track with multiple instruments, you can always try using the stem splitter in Logic Pro 11 to have the session player follow a specific track
You can also use Superior Drummer 3 in place of Logic’s drums.
in addition to Brad’s post regarding the click track, even if you didn’t record your audio to a click track. You can use the smart tempo feature in logic to map your tempo to your audio. The drums will follow automagically. I do this many times when I have a guitar idea. It often provides a more organic feel to the song.
jord
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