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Logic Pro 9 User Manual - Help Library - Apple

Logic Pro 9 User Manual - Help Library - Apple

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Tip: The Freeze function also works with DSP hardware such as the PowerCore, LiquidMix,<br />

Duende, and UAD devices. This compatibility allows you to combine <strong>Logic</strong> <strong>Pro</strong> instruments<br />

and effects with those provided by the DSP hardware, even if the processing capacity of<br />

your computer, the DSP hardware, or both, are exceeded.<br />

The Freeze function always bounces the complete channel signal. If you are using more<br />

than one track for the same audio or instrument channel in the Arrange area, then all<br />

(sub)tracks of this channel are frozen, and cannot be edited independently. In other words,<br />

it is the channel strip that is frozen, not the track.<br />

Knowing When to Freeze a Track<br />

In real-world situations, Freeze allows you to:<br />

• Use extra effect plug-ins or software instruments in additional audio or instrument<br />

tracks, which would normally be impossible as it would exceed the CPU-processing<br />

limits of your computer.<br />

• Play back projects created on computers with greater CPU power.<br />

Freeze is designed to circumvent very CPU-intensive processes, which are generally<br />

outlined as follows (from highest to lowest demand):<br />

• Software instruments with a complex voice architecture<br />

• Plug-ins with a complex structure (reverbs, filter banks, or FFT-based effects)<br />

• Software instruments with a simple voice architecture<br />

• Software sampler with active filter<br />

• Software sampler with inactive filter<br />

• Plug-ins with a simple structure<br />

If your computer is able to calculate all active processes in real time, it’s unnecessary to<br />

freeze tracks.<br />

Freeze is recommended whenever your system’s processing power runs short and one,<br />

or multiple, existing tracks with CPU-intensive software instrument or effect plug-ins are<br />

in a finalized state, or at least seem to require no further changes for the time being—in<br />

other words, a close-to-final mix.<br />

As long as a track is frozen, its CPU usage is reduced to that of a high-resolution audio<br />

playback track with no effect plug-ins inserted, regardless of the number, or processing<br />

demands, of the plug-ins that were originally used on the track.<br />

Freezing a Track<br />

It’s easy to freeze a track, using the Freeze button in the track header and the Freeze<br />

mode parameter in the Inspector’s Track Parameter box.<br />

Chapter 9 Working with Tracks<br />

247

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