Hiding and showing extended parameters – Apple Logic Express 9 User Manual
Page 283

The plug-in processes the audio of the aux channel strip selected in the Side Chain menu,
and not the audio of the instrument channel strip that the plug-in is inserted into.
The signal peaks of the side chain input (the sent instrument signal), combined with the
Threshold parameter of the plug-in, determine when the plug-in is triggered.
The following are some side chaining examples:
• A sustained pad sound is sent through a noise gate, which is triggered by a drum track
being used as the side chain input signal. This results in a rhythmic pad sound which
follows the signal peaks of the drum track.
• A noise gate inserted into a bass guitar channel is triggered by the kick drum track via
the side chain. This can tighten the timing of the bass guitar, as it follows the kick drum
signal.
• Side chains can also be used to blend a music mix with a voiceover. To achieve this,
the mix needs to be routed through a compressor which, in turn, is side chained, using
the voice-over track. In this type of setup, the music becomes softer when the narrator
is speaking, and louder when not. The effect is also known as ducking. Note that in
order for this to function, the Automatic Gain Make-up or Auto Gain control (if applicable
to the Compressor plug-in) must be disabled.
Hiding and Showing Extended Parameters
Some Logic Express plug-ins may have additional parameters that don’t appear in the
Editor view (the graphical interface of the plug-in).
This is indicated by a disclosure triangle that appears at the bottom-left corner of the
plug-in window.
If no disclosure triangle is visible, the plug-in has no additional parameters.
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Chapter 10
Working with Instruments and Effects