Section 28.1. Instrument-Named Presets


28.1. Instrument-Named Presets

Whenever you double-click a track's header, its Track Info dialog box appears. At the top of it, GarageBand presents a list of what appear to be instrument names (Figure 28-1).

At first glance, these instrument names may seem to have completely different functions for the two kinds of tracks in GarageBand:

  • If you've opened a blue Real Instrument track, these instrument names don't refer to instrument sounds; they identify effects presets . Each is a carefully adjusted combination of studio processing effectsreverb, EQ (equalization), and so onthat, in the opinion of a professional recording engineer, is well suited to the instrument named in the list.

  • If you've opened a green Software Instrument track, you might assume that the instrument names hereGrand Piano, Orchestral Strings, and so on are instrument sounds. After all, selecting a different instrument in the list changes the sound of whatever's in the track.

    Figure 28-1. The Track Info dialog box is a lot like the New Track dialog box. But when you click Details, some important controls appear at the bottom. These are the building-block effects generators that make up the instrument-named presets in the top list. (And the two pop-up menus in the Details panel list the building blocks of those building blocks. It's possible to burrow down very deeply into GarageBand's effects-processing underworld.)


    But as you'll find out in this chapter, these instrument names also include custom-tailored effects. These are, in other words, instrument-and-effect presets.

    For each one, you can modify not only the effect Apple has assigned, but even the sounds themselves , which GarageBand generates from 18 built-in modulesPiano, Strings, Guitar, and so on. For a given instrument named in the list, you can even substitute a different sound module altogether.

When you click an instrument category in the left-side list, the presets are listed in the right-side list. Apple has tried to name them helpfully, to suggest their sonic effect: for example, Edgy Drums, Punk Bass, or (in the Vocals category) Epic Diva. In the Guitar category, most of these presets incorporate the famous GarageBand guitar- amplifier simulations (Section 28.3.4.1).

Whatever effect preset you choose becomes part of the track. Any sound in that track is affected the same way by those effects.




iLife 05. The Missing Manual
iLife 05: The Missing Manual
ISBN: 0596100361
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 314
Authors: David Pogue

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