

The nuance of the plugins in Logic make all the difference in the final product, though. When dealing with raw sound, raw sound is raw sound, there's no quality difference. I look at the GB screen when helping friends and I think "Why is this needlessly complicated?" (even though most people think the other way round). I'm so lost in GB because there's no mixer. For a free app, GarageBand is astonishingly good.

It is a surprisingly capable tool, if you dig in and learn all of its hidden features and capabilities. There are also hundreds (thousands?) of albums that have been fully recorded and produced in GarageBand. You can also output the individual audio files, and bring them into a "pro" system like Logic to do a professional final mix and master before release. GarageBand songs can be output as final songs (MP3 or YouTube formats, for example) to play on any digital device, or even to import into Logic.
Logic pro vs garageband movie#
From an orchestra to a three-piece punk band to producing movie soundtracks, Logic has every tool and option available for any type of recording. Logic is a professional studio recording tool, with an incredibly deep feature set, that is designed to be used for multitrack recording/mixing/mastering, and being an all-in-one solution for every recording need. Then you can output that song (or individual tracks) to different formats depending on what you want to do with it. GarageBand is designed to be easy to use by someone with no recording experience. The primary difference is in the intended purpose between the two apps. No, there is no "sound quality" difference.
