Now housed inside Logic Pro X, the Remix FX plug-in brings more than just a few DJ tricks to Apple’s flagship production suite. To some degree overshadowed by the influx of game-changing new tools and technologies that hit Logic Pro X with the 10.5 update, the multi-FX, touch control plug-in rig can be a particularly useful and creative production tool that only enhances new powerhouse additions like Sampler and Live Loops. Below we are exploring its capabilities and how Logic Pro X users can take advantage of the immersive touch-based musical performance surface.
Logic Pro X Remix FX
While the Remix FX experience might be a familiar one to avid GarageBand users and iOS producers, it might not be for Logic Pro X lifers. It also might look like a throwaway bundle of basic effects, all but useful and only for a select group of EDM DJs. It’s not. It’s actually a particularly good, if not predictable and to-the-point, real-time FX rig, that can also be quite handy in a wide variety of musical genres from pop, EDM, chill music, and hip-hop, to just about anything that isn’t aimed at being an entirely and particularly organic experience for the listener. So let’s dive in and take a closer look.
Remix FX is a multi-FX plug-in with a collection of large, touchable controls made up of sliders, parameter buttons, and touchpads. From filters and echoes to wild modulating flourishes and beat stutters, it houses a menagerie of creative FX that can be applied to your tracks in various ways. It loads up like any other plug-in and is now bundled inside the Multi Effect folder that was added in 2018 with Phat FX and Step FX (the imagery in this post sometimes shows the new Remix FX in a custom plug-in location).
Ideal for adding some finishing touch effects on your master output, Remix FX can also be instantiated on individual instruments, Aux track subgroups, and more. Along with the obvious DJ-style touches on an entire song, I have found it to be particularly useful on individual instruments as well. It is great for taking an individual loop from cool to even more interesting, and then for injecting dynamics and crescendos to add life across an entire arrangement, for example.
It has a more typical filter, a sort of wobbly filter with some movement to it, the Orbit effect (a modulating flanger and phaser combo), stuttering Repeater effects, reverb, delay, the Gater, and more — each with one or more customizable parameters like a color setting on the reverb, filter types, etc.
The main idea here is that we can swipe our mouse across the Remix FX interface’s controls to trigger creative effects in our music, with the ability to record all of these moves using Logic Pro X’s intuitive automation system or in Live Loops performance recordings.
Remix FX Remote Touch Control
But with Logic Remote integration, we can also get particularly hands-on with these performances and FX flourishes. Connecting an iOS device to your Logic Pro X system with Apple’s remote app allows for multi-touch performance directly on the Remix FX plug-in interface just like in GarageBand for iPad. Combined with Logic Pro X’s automation system, it’s a particularly streamlined example of an all-in-one FX rig with solid multi-touch control. And one that is directly built-into Logic Pro X for no additional charge, via a touch device you most likely already own.
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