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> Using Logic Pro On Imac G5 For Live Gig
elpasadoDarturo
posté jeu. 24 déc. 2009, 02:35
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What is the BEST way to perform live (at bar) using Logic Pro with iMac G5?

I have a hard time, well, it takes a lot of time loading each individual song project...Open - Perform song - Close, then open the next project....It seems to complicated but Then again, I'm New to live gigs, logic I have used for a while.

Can someone please help?

Art
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houstonmusic
posté jeu. 24 déc. 2009, 17:40
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live sequencer/computer systems are never fast enough. but i've used DP and Live in performance situations, and a few things sped up the load-perform times.

in DP, i use only 1 project, with many 'chunks' that are essentially different songs. I find that rendering my many tracks to audio-only stems, with the effects printed in already, speeds up load times. a fast external drive helps. some backing tracks don't need any live remixing at all, and they get bounced to one or two stems. others get a more flexible treatment. I then treat the individual stems like cells in Live, bringing them in and out to perform the arrangement on the fly.

Live is more suited to this free form process.

i will say that a G5 imac is not a particularly fast machine, though i understand the need to have a 'beater' out on gigs. i'd bet an intel laptop of 3 years ago would be cheap and measurably faster.

good luck.

Ce message a été modifié par houstonmusic - jeu. 24 déc. 2009, 17:40.
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elpasadoDarturo
posté sam. 26 déc. 2009, 11:24
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QUOTE (houstonmusic @ Thu 24 Dec 2009, 18:40) *
live sequencer/computer systems are never fast enough. but i've used DP and Live in performance situations, and a few things sped up the load-perform times.

in DP, i use only 1 project, with many 'chunks' that are essentially different songs. I find that rendering my many tracks to audio-only stems, with the effects printed in already, speeds up load times. a fast external drive helps. some backing tracks don't need any live remixing at all, and they get bounced to one or two stems. others get a more flexible treatment. I then treat the individual stems like cells in Live, bringing them in and out to perform the arrangement on the fly.

Live is more suited to this free form process.

i will say that a G5 imac is not a particularly fast machine, though i understand the need to have a 'beater' out on gigs. i'd bet an intel laptop of 3 years ago would be cheap and measurably faster.

good luck.




Hey Huston, cheers from Mission TX...

Before anything,I appreciate your response and wish you the best vibes for you dude!

OK, Fortunately I Have been experimenting with live and it is a big blur for me still. If you can send me? a part or the concert settings of your successful experience you already had with it. You see, I toyed around with the rewire in one channel or cell? and it looks to me that what you are saying or I understand rather, a cell contains all midi or audio channel strips from logic?
i figure if you can send me a screen shot or again, the template you used for that gig will be a great relief, I am switching careers from sales to bar-event solo performer, that's why I'm looking for fast project switching (song Switching) to perform 2 to 3 hours of "live " music in an effective and expedite way.

some backing tracks I have mixed to two audio tracks from midi project, and some I left the midi version with 2 audio tracks... What do you recommend midi or audio? Which one consumes less virtual memory?

By the way I am not clear about your obserbation about my mac and here is a description of what I'm running on..

Your now south-Texas contact,

Arturo Salinas Girodengo




Hardware Overview:

Model Name: iMac
Model Identifier: iMac4,1
Processor Name: Intel Core Duo
Processor Speed: 1.83 GHz
Number Of Processors: 1
Total Number Of Cores: 2
L2 Cache: 2 MB
Memory: 2 GB
Bus Speed: 667 MHz
Boot ROM Version: IM41.0055.B08
SMC Version (system): 1.1f5

QUOTE (elpasadoDarturo @ Sat 26 Dec 2009, 12:21) *
QUOTE (houstonmusic @ Thu 24 Dec 2009, 18:40) *
live sequencer/computer systems are never fast enough. but i've used DP and Live in performance situations, and a few things sped up the load-perform times.

in DP, i use only 1 project, with many 'chunks' that are essentially different songs. I find that rendering my many tracks to audio-only stems, with the effects printed in already, speeds up load times. a fast external drive helps. some backing tracks don't need any live remixing at all, and they get bounced to one or two stems. others get a more flexible treatment. I then treat the individual stems like cells in Live, bringing them in and out to perform the arrangement on the fly.

Live is more suited to this free form process.

i will say that a G5 imac is not a particularly fast machine, though i understand the need to have a 'beater' out on gigs. i'd bet an intel laptop of 3 years ago would be cheap and measurably faster.

good luck.




Hey Huston, cheers from Mission TX...

Before anything,I appreciate your response and wish you the best vibes for you dude!

OK, Fortunately I Have been experimenting with live and it is a big blur for me still. If you can send me? a part or the concert settings of your successful experience you already had with it. You see, I toyed around with the rewire in one channel or cell? and it looks to me that what you are saying or I understand rather, a cell contains all midi or audio channel strips from logic?
i figure if you can send me a screen shot or again, the template you used for that gig will be a great relief, I am switching careers from sales to bar-event solo performer, that's why I'm looking for fast project switching (song Switching) to perform 2 to 3 hours of "live " music in an effective and expedite way.

some backing tracks I have mixed to two audio tracks from midi project, and some I left the midi version with 2 audio tracks... What do you recommend midi or audio? Which one consumes less virtual memory?

By the way I am not clear about your obserbation about my mac and here is a description of what I'm running on..

Your now south-Texas contact,

Arturo Salinas Girodengo




Hardware Overview:

Model Name: iMac
Model Identifier: iMac4,1
Processor Name: Intel Core Duo
Processor Speed: 1.83 GHz
Number Of Processors: 1
Total Number Of Cores: 2
L2 Cache: 2 MB
Memory: 2 GB
Bus Speed: 667 MHz
Boot ROM Version: IM41.0055.B08
SMC Version (system): 1.1f5



Ce message a été modifié par elpasadoDarturo - sam. 26 déc. 2009, 11:23.
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