Your latest masterpiece is complete - now what to do with it?
Logic Pro X has a range of different options to choose from when it comes to sharing your music with the world at large. In order for that to happen though, all your audio and MIDI tracks, together with their effects and any automation you’ve applied, need to be rendered as a new stereo audio file, in a process known as ‘bouncing’. This bounced stereo file can be sent to a mastering facility, posted to the iTunes Store, added to an iTunes playlist, uploaded to a mobile device, or even be reused in your Logic project to conserve processing power. Bouncing a set of surround audio files is also possible, but in this tutorial we’re going to focus on creating a stereo audio file, for which Output 1-2 is the default output.
‘Bouncing’ refers to all of your tracks, effects and automations being rendered as a new stereo file
Let’s bounce!
Render your finished Logic project as a stereo audio file