Last year, Apple released GarageBand 2.1 a day before the start of the Winter NAMM show. Despite the ‘.1' designation this update introduced a host of new functionality, such as Live Loops, Remix FX, Drummer, and support for Audio Unit Extensions. This year the company decided to follow the same. Setting up GarageBand for recording with an external mic requires just a few simple steps. 1 Connect the microphone (or audio interface and microphone) to your Mac, as instructed in the documentation that came with the product. 2 Choose Apple menu System Preferences or, in the Dock, click the System Preferences icon. Share To GarageBand iOS. As mentioned, Apple also updated GarageBand iOS, in part it seems to allow files to be shared between the two programs via iCloud Drive. Garageband 10.2 has a new option in the Share menu. This allows you to save either the whole project or individual tracks to iCloud Drive.
- Apple Garageband 10 2 – Complete Recording Studio And More Beautiful
- Apple Garageband 10 2 – Complete Recording Studio And More Music
- Home Recording Studio
your workflow is backward, you could make your life much easier by reversing it.
Planner studio pro 1 4 1 – manage multiple calendars.
record a scratch track (or two) on the iMac, say guitar and bass. these recordings don't have to sound good, they can even have wrong notes in them, it doesn't matter; all that matters is that you play in time, and the exact framework you intend to use (verses, choruses, etc)
Apple Garageband 10 2 – Complete Recording Studio And More Beautiful
export that project to disk using the Share menu (i'm not sure why you think you have to use iTunes) as an AIFF file.
Apple Garageband 10 2 – Complete Recording Studio And More Music
bring the AIFF to the laptop and drop it into GB 6.0.5., and record your drum tracks
Home Recording Studio
save the project and bring it to your iMac, open it with GB v10 (it'll ask you to save a copy, do so), delete the scratch track, and now do your _real_ recording of guitars, bass, keys, etc.