10.6

Table Of Contents
546Logic Pro User Guide
Adjust the Stereo Pan knob for a channel strip
In Logic Pro, do the following:
To adjust the stereo spread of one channel without affecting the other channel, drag the
white handle. For example, if you want to narrow the stereo field of the left channel only,
drag the white handle of the left channel vertically closer to the center position.
To invert the right and left channels, Command-click anywhere inside the Stereo Pan
knob or ring. The signal ring changes color from green to orange (or back again).
To widen or narrow the stereo spread range, drag the green or orange ring vertically.
To adjust the center position of the stereo spread, drag the center of the Stereo Pan
knob vertically.
To reset the stereo spread and center position to their initial values, Option-click
anywhere inside the Stereo Pan knob or ring.
When a channel strip output is set to Surround, the knob is replaced by a Surround control.
Mute and solo channel strips in Logic Pro
You can silence (mute) a channel strip so that you don’t hear it when you play the project.
Muting channel strips is useful when you want to compare how the project sounds with and
without the target track, compare alternative versions of a track, or try different loops in a
project.
You can also listen to a channel strip signal alone (solo), silencing all other channel strips.
Soloing channel strips is useful when you want to work on a track or region individually; for
example, when you’re editing regions on the track, re-recording a part, or adjusting volume
curves.
Mute a channel strip
In Logic Pro, click the channel strip’s Mute button.
The Mute button turns blue. Click the button a second time to restore the channel strip to
its previous level.