Flex Time Garageband Ipad

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Apple’s Garageband can be used on a number of different devices, the iMac, the MacBook Pro, the iPad, and the iPhone.

iMac, MacBook Pro, iPad, iPhone, and Apple, are all registered trademarks of Apple.

Each type of device has its own drawbacks and limitations. For instance, some people prefer to use an iPhone due to its portability and convenience.

But others may prefer using an iMac, because of the additional power and large screen, which makes it a lot easier to navigate and use for energy-intensive plug-ins and software.

In terms of overall value, the iPad Pro is the best option for producing music with Garageband, for a few reasons, including convenience, its versatility, the touch screen, and updated power and processing speed.

You can check out the price of the iPad Pro® on Amazon here.

We’re going to explore some of those reasons in detail.

Why The iPad Is Best for Garageband

1) Convenience

The iPad Pro 11″ is the best for music production with Garageband due to it being almost as easy to use on a computer, while at the same time, having more power than what’s available on an iPhone.

Let’s face it, this is where music production is headed at the moment. As mobile devices become increasingly powerful, the iPad seems like a better option all of the time.

For instance, the latest iPad Pro 11″ has a lot more RAM, memory, and processing speed than they used too, meaning, they’re no longer just for watching Netflix as they were in the past (although, they were always capable of more).

The convenience of using an iPad can’t be understated. Because they’re so sleek and portable, it’s easy to stick it in your backpack, satchel, briefcase, or your suitcase.

They’re incredibly lightweight, and it doesn’t hurt at all to carry one of them around with you, even more than the MacBook Pro, which is not a burden either, frankly.

Admittedly, it’s always going to be best to produce music on a more powerful and much larger computer, but it looks like smaller devices are becoming more capable than they were before.

2) The Interface is Versatile

The new iPads allow you to use Garageband in a number of ways, including turning it into a Drumpad or a MIDI keyboard by just selecting a new interface.

This is something that can’t be done with a MacBook Pro, at least to my knowledge.

Furthermore, iPad users know that you can turn the standard interface into a guitar, where you actually strum it like a guitar, can bend notes, and do all kinds of cool techniques that a guitar can also do.

3) Touch Screen

As I mentioned in passing above, the touch screen interface is great for making adjustments in your workspace, making the workflow extremely smooth.

Because I’ve grown accustomed to doing everything through clicking with the trackpad or through a mouse, I find that this is the best way to go about it, but people who have gotten used to a touch screen interface often find it challenging to go back.

I can totally understand why this is the case after using Garageband on an iPad. It appears to be a lot smoother and faster when using one.

Some users of iPad claim that the touch-screen interface, in some ways, actually mimics analog equipment, in the sense that you’re touching and adjusting knobs manually with your hands, in comparison to using a computer or a laptop, where all changes have to be made with a mouse, trackpad, or keyboard.

This may be a selling point for someone who prefers more of a tactile interface that mimics the hands-on action of using actual gear and equipment, in comparison to just clicking all of the time with a mouse or trackpad.

4) Updated Power, RAM, Storage, and Processing Speed

The new iPad Pro 11″ has a lot more power than the old iPads, which commonly had processing speed in the 1.5GHz range.

Flex Time Garageband Ipad

The new iPad Pro has 2.4 GHz processing speed, which means that it’s quite fast and powerful.

While it’s much better to have a processor speed above 3.0 GHz, the iPad’s processor speed is going to be enough to meet pretty much all of your needs.

If you’ve made the smart decision and gotten the iPad with the most amount of storage as well, around 1012 GB of storage, you’ll almost never run into an issue with storage.

Ironically, the iPad Pro 11″ has more storage capacity than my MacBook Pro, making me wonder why I just didn’t get an iPad Pro instead of the MacBook Pro.

However, I needed a computer for other functions, so the MacBook Pro was the best option for me at the time.

With that said though, if you need a device for the sole purpose of music production and you don’t have to do much typing, then the iPad Pro is going to be a good move.

It’s worth mentioning that the most recent and most powerful iPad Pro 11″, is actually more powerful than any MacBook Pro that’s currently on the market, which is really saying something about the future of music production on computers.

5) Don’t Need To Purchase Additional Gear (Although, You Should)

If you use a laptop or a computer for Garageband music production, at some point, you’re going to need all kinds of additional gear, including a MIDI controller/keyboard.

With the iPad, due to its multi-functional interface, you can just turn it into a MIDI keyboard, guitar, or a piano if needed.

With that said, however, I’d argue that having an actual MIDI keyboard is a lot better than using the iPad interface, especially if you want to play more sophisticated melodies, or you’re an actual instrumentalist.

While I would like to sit here and market an iPad to you and tell you how great it is, I always think that having the real thing is going to be far superior to anything Apple can simulate or mimic.

This brings me to my next point.

6) Ability to Use External Gear

In addition to having an easy-to-use interface, you can purchase any other gear that you want and also use that, for instance, a full MIDI keyboard with 49 keys.

You can plug in your actual guitar with an audio interface such as the iRig HD 2, which I’ve recommended on my site before.

You can hook up a condenser, dynamic, or a ribbon mic as well, or you can plug in a drum pad if you need it.

Cons of Using iPad Pro

With all of the features mentioned above, it’s clear that the iPad Pro is a great device for creating music either through Garageband, Logic Pro, or some other DAW, but it would be silly to suggest there aren’t obvious cons.

For one, I would say that it’s adaptors.

1) Adaptors

The necessity for a variety of different adaptors, while it’s something that’s seen across the board now with computers and other devices, is kind of annoying.

However, this looks like the way that the market is currently heading. Technology companies such as Apple want sleek, compact, and mobile devices for the future that are also lightweight and powerful.

But the trade-off is that you have to go out and buy the adaptors or additional storage if you actually need it.

In other words, devices are designed nowadays in such a way where it’s great for a casual music producer who doesn’t use a lot of sophisticated plug-ins and software as well as for artists who want to use it for music creation and recording while on the go.

Conclusion

All-in-all, I think that the future will see a lot more music producers and creators using iPads and other extremely mobile devices for their art.

With that said, however, there will always be people that want to use the full range and functionality of a more powerful computer.

In today’s tutorial, I’m going to show you how I recently used pitch correction in the manner consistent (at least in sound) with Travis Scott and other hip-hop artists of the day. The first thing I’ll do is give you a brief summary on how to simply use the auto-tune/pitch-correction feature in Garageband, and then I’ll walk you through a step-by-step tutorial later on.

Pitch-correction is almost always used in the recording process, and every artist uses it, from metal bands, rock bands, pop singers, and so on and so forth. Similar to ghost-writers and professional producers/writers working on your favorite artist’s latest record, it’s just a part of the business and it’s a part of how the game is played at a high level, how do you go about using it in GarageBand?

To use Garageband’s autotune and pitch-correction plug-in:
1) Select the proper signature in the Key Signature Display
2) Double-click on the vocal recording to select it
3) Click “Track,” in the Smart Controls
4) Check the “Limit to Key” box
5) Slide the Pitch Correction dial to around 70

This is the easiest way to go about it, however, there are many things you can do with vocals, especially if you’ve purchased a really good audio editing software like Melodyne 5 Editor from Plugin Boutique. Melodyne is a whole other tutorial on its own (my guide), so we’ll just talk about the default one that comes with Garageband today.

How To Use Auto-Tune (Pitch Correction) In Garageband.

First things first.

You need to know the key signature of the music. This should be the first step you make.

If you want to know the key signature of the song, I just find the tonal center of the music, and then I play the notes of that scale.

For instance, when I jammed along to Dave East’s “Type Of Time” recently, I knew it was in the key of C Minor (relative major: Eb Major).

I figured it out, just by searching around on my guitar for the note on which the entire song is built, and then I played the natural minor scale up from the root note, carefully listening for each note to hear any dissonances.

If you don’t know anything about major or minor scales, I suggest checking out MusicTheory.net, as they have great tutorials for beginners to music theory or Mark Sarnecki’s book on Amazon including the Answer Book.

You can also use the tool, TuneBat.

TuneBat is a pretty good resource for quickly finding the key signature of a song. They have quite a bit in there.

Personally, I like figuring it out for myself that way I don’t have to depend on the software, however, if you’re only a music producer rather than a musician, sight-reading or improvising skills really aren’t that important.

Also, understand that pitch-correction and auto-tune are used only for recordings and obviously not MIDI recordings.

1) Open a new project/already existing project.

2) Hit (Command + Option + A) to bring up an Audio track.

3) You’ll see down in the Smart Controls the way the Audio looks in wave format, in addition to a few different settings including, “Limit to Key,” and “Enable Flex.”

4) From here, what you want to do is hit the “Enable Flex” and “Limit Key” check-boxes to ensure that when you record some vocals or other music, the pitch correction tool will come in keep everything in the key.

5) At this point, I’m sure you’re already familiar with the key signature option at the top center of the DAW, but for the sake of clarification, I’ll speak of it anyway.

Just go up to the top-center where it displays the beats per minute, measure, time signature, and the tempo (more on these parameters in my key signature guide). You can adjust the key signature from there.

6) Now, if you want to make auto-tune work in the style of, say, for example, T-Pain, you’re going to need to know the key signature of the track in which to sing.

7) Depending on how much auto-tune you want to use, you can adjust the pitch correction on a 1-100 scale within the Smart Controls.

If you put it all the way to 100, that’s obviously the most amount of pitch-correction you can use.

8) The next step is to begin recording your vocals, and then listen to how the pitch correction tool has changed the way your vocals sound.

In the Instagram post below, you can see what it sounds like without pitch correction and with the pitch-correction all the way up to 100.

The first thing that you hear is the out-of-key version of “Stargazing” from Travis Scott.

You’ll notice when I say the word, “Stargazing,” it sounds out of key. But then after I adjust the pitch the correction to 100 it starts to sound good.

In conclusion, the steps I laid out above is how you pitch-correct a vocal track. However, if you want to use auto-tune as a creative tool in the style of Travis Scott, then there are additional details.

It’s worth mentioning that between 65 and 75 is the best range for the pitch correction tool if you’re just trying to correct those imperfections.

Also, it’s best to give the best singing performance possible, because the pitch correction tool works at its most optimal when the notes are only slightly off.

If you just sing wildly out of tune, the benefit of using the pitch correction software is lost. You can try it for yourself some time to see what I mean. With all that said, there is software available that allows you to change the pitch of notes altogether without affecting the human quality, including Melodyne, which I’ve written about before.

How To Use Auto-Tune Like Travis Scott

For this, it’s pretty much the same thing as the steps listed above, but we have to add a few more effects, including delay, reverb, and a bit of compression as well, actually, probably a lot.

For the sake of clarity, I’ll run through these steps once again.

1) Bring up your audio track using the (Command + Option + A) function.

2) Click on the Audio Region.

3) Click on Track.

4) Check both boxes, “Limit to Key,” as well as “Enable Flex.”

5) Hit Record on your Audio Track, and then record yourself singing whatever it is that you want to sing.

If I were you, I would make sure that you have the “Feedback Protection” box clicked, just in case.

Is Garageband Available For Ipad

Also, if you’re going to use your computer’s built-in microphone, you’ll have to plug headphones in like Etymotic’s ER4SEs from Amazon due to the fact the microphone and built-in speakers are too close to each other.

If you plan on actually making legitimate vocals, obviously, it’d be a much better option to use a good microphone like the Audio Technica AT2021 which also can be found on Amazon.

Moving on…

6) Turn the pitch-correction all the way up to 100 that way it’s working as much as possible.

7) Go into your Plug-ins, and select the options, Compressor, Platinum Verb within the Reverb options, the Stereo Delay, as well as the Channel EQ

8) First, go into your EQ, and EQ the audio track so it looks like the image I’ve laid out below.

You can see that the Lows have been boosted considerably, as well as the highs, and then the mids are cut out almost completely.

9) Then, go into your Compressor and set it at the settings you can see below in the image.

10) For the Platinum Verb, I just keep it at the default setting.

11) Now that you have your final track, you can see that it kind of has that Washed out with Reverb/Robot style which is Travis Scott’s style. I don’t mean that derisively, those are just the mannerisms that come to mind.

12) For the next step, you want to copy and paste your audio track into two new duplicate tracks, however, you’ll pan the one to the left and one to the right using the pan buttons that look like this.

13) After this, make sure you turn off the Delay off the two duplicate tracks because otherwise, there will be too much of it.

Effects like Reverb and Delay kind of add up on top of each other, so make sure to not over-use these features.

How To Use Auto-Tune (Pitch Correction) In iOS

Setting up pitch correction and auto-tune in iOS isn’t much different from how you’d do it on the Mac.

Without further ado..

1) The first thing you want to do, is hit the option, “+” on the top right-hand side of the screen when you first open up Garageband iOS.

2) Select the option, “Audio Recorder.” 2

3) Now, you’ll come to a little dial in the center of the screen that kind of looks like a children’s toy. Choose the Golden Microphone option titled, “Extreme Tuning.”

4) From there, go into the drop-down menu on the top-left hand of the screen and click on the “Extreme Tuning” icon.

5) Then, click on the setting that says, “Vocals.”

6) Choose the option “Lead Vocals” from there.

What Does Flex Do In Garageband

7) We now have five dials from which to choose, Tone, Pitch Control, Compressor, Drive, and Vocal Hall.

6) Hit the dials (that looks like a Gear) of the top-right hand side of the screen, and then click on “Track Controls,” which whill then bring up all of the plug-ins.

7) Add a little bit of Reverb and then Delay.

8) You can adjust the compressor up or down, depending on how much you want to equalize the sound.

9) From here, as I mentioned in the tutorial above, you need to figure out the key signature of your song. Considering the fact it’s the song you’ve likely written, you’ll know what the key is.

10) If you need to adjust the Key Signature, click on the icon that looks a gear, then choose “Song Settings.” From there, you can see where it gives Tempo and Key Signature options.

If you’re using someone else’s song, try TuneBat.

***Having the proper key signature set up is an important detail because it gives the pitch correction software a standard by which to measure and adjust.

If you have the wrong Key Signature, auto-tune won’t work properly because the tool will adjust the wrong notes to the wrong pitch.

***There’s also an Application that you can download called, “Voloco,” which acts as a harmonizer and pitch correction tool. I don’t think it’s that necessary frankly, but you can try that out.

You can refer to the Instagram post above if you want to hear the final product.

As I’ve mentioned before, probably the most important things to remember when using auto-tune and pitch correction are as follows:

Flex Time Garageband Ipad Pro

  1. Adjust the amount of correction from 0 to 100
  2. Use Delay and Reverb
  3. Sing on key to really maximize the utility of pitch correction software.

YouTube Video Tutorial

Conclusion

And that’s pretty much it.

Anyway, I hope this helped you out. Make sure to share it on your social media if you enjoyed it.

Additionally, check out my recommended gear page for more recommendations.