I'm
using GarageBand and Cubase LE or LE4. GarageBand is better for me for
recording the initial MIDI, using its own instruments plus QT
Instruments and Sound Fonts; but Cubase has an on-screen
mixer
with fader automation, so that you can make and adjust your mix in
realtime and it will remember the fader settings and movements.
The is the procedure:
Record all the MIDI and any real instruments. Don't bother
with effects
and only do a rough mix so you can tell what's going on.
When you're happy with the tracks, click the padlock icon
on all of
them to lock them. Press 'play' and wait while the machine locks the
tracks. Stop play and save the project.
Quit GarageBand.
Find the project file. Right-click on it and choose 'Show package
contents'. Inside the project is a folder called 'Freeze Files'. Copy
all the files out of this into a new folder and place it where it is convenient for Cubase to be able to access it.
The files
have code names. You can't drag them into Cubase LE as they stand for
some reason (I think they are 32 bit so that might be why), but you can with LE4. If you open each
in an audio editor such as Amadeus, identify them, and save them with
the track title you can then drag them into Cubase LE.
Open a new Cubase project: you don't need
to create any empty tracks. Drag the newly saved tracks into Cubase and
they will appear there. Now you can add effects and have the advantage
of the fader-based automated mixing.
It's all a little
complicated, but though you can do automated level changes in
GarageBand by 'drawing' in the automation track, it's fiddly and
becomes a nuisance if
you have a lot to do. With the faders you can do a decent mix, then
automate any changes quite easily and hear what's happening as you do
it.
Cubase
LE was bundled with some hardware such as mixers, but is not fully
compatible with Apple OSX Leopard: if you have LE you may be able to
get an upgrade to LE4 by contacting the maker of your hardware. I have
used the above processwith LE and LE4, and it may well be
possible to get it to work in the full version of Cubase or other
similar
programs.