Following on from my initial Garageband for iPad Review, reflections on the completion of my first song produced solely in Garageband for iOS.
First of all, here is the finished song:
Overall, I’m really happy with it (let me know what you think). But, one song in, what’s Garageband iOS really like to work with?
I’m definitely missing markers and more advanced transport controls
As detailed in the original review, Garageband for iPad/iOS doesn’t allow you to simply mark a point in a song (e.g. verse 1, chorus etc) and instead gives you sections, which are far less intuitive to the point of being downright confusing. Sections force you down the road of manually needed to add-in song parts as the song builds and it’s length increases.
It’s all a little silly and unnecessary, with the only reason for it being perhaps it needs to be designed this way to get around the lower specs of iOS devices when compared to a desktop.
Another annoyance is the inability to set up auto-punch ins/outs from the transport controls. The quickest way around this to duplicate a track and merge your takes together. It works but it’s a slower workflow.
The drummer, instruments and the guitar/bass amp models are all great
With Ableton, I spent a great deal of time and effort in researching various hardware and software options to get me the sounds I wanted. With Garageband, everything is under one roof, and I’ve only just scratched the surface. Check out the track for an example, all recorded in Garageband with its standard instruments.
No performance issues, for my needs
When You’re in Love consists of the following tracks: Drums, Bass (Both Garageband instruments), Lead vocal, 3x Backing vocals, Keyboards, Guitar (Both Garageband instruments),2x lead guitar (Garageband Guitar Amp). That’s 10 tracks on a 3-minute song.
Yes, I got the odd optimizing message, and towards the end performance/capacity warnings, but once I’d cleaned up my tracks it was fine.
All in all, the Garageband spec seems to be aligned with my production needs.
Garageband for iOS is a joy to work with
The iPad’s physical form feels light years away from my days of sitting down at a desktop, allowing you to create music literally anywhere at any time. Software-wise, everything I need is provided in Garageband, meaning a simpler, more intuitive, and more performant interface.
But the real magic comes when the hardware and software combine with the touch screen and the virtual instruments to create a truly inspiring environment for creating and producing music. Garageband for iOS/iPad is already leading me away from my standard mindset of drums/guitar/vocal, and down the road of experimenting with loops, synths and a whole library of sounds I really couldn’t be bothered with before, all in one tiny device.
Garageband vs Ableton Live
I used a desktop PC with Ableton Live and a BOSS BR-800 audio interface for years. So how does a finished recording with this setup compare to Garageband for iOS? Well, here’s a song I recorded in Ableton Live:
Final Master
Now, you’ll notice this appears to be quite a bit louder than the Garageband song, but don’t be fooled, Everything’s Alright was mastered far too hot, meaning that, yes, it’s louder, but on closer inspection, the vocals are, in fact, quite distorted. When You’re in Love is a much cleaner recording.
Garageband for iOS Drummer vs Toontrack EZ Drummer
The drums do sound better in Ableton (Ez-Drummer). They’re crisper and stand out more, but that’s purely a compression/EQ thing. I’ll fix that next time in Garageband.
Bass
Bass wise, you’re talking a real bass into a COSM bass amp (Ableton setup), verses a Garageband Smart Bass track. The Garageband sound is obviously going to be tighter and more accurate in this scenario vs the looser feel of the Live recording.
Tough one to call really, I like both. Real bass is obviously more organic and flexible though.
Note: Garageband for iOS is perfectly capable of recording a real bass too, should you chose to do so.
Feel
If I’m honest, the Ableton song does have more impact and confidence about it, but I think that’s more down to the fact I was so well versed in the Ableton Live workflow and toolset at the time, whereas with Garageband I’m still learning the ropes.
Conclusion
What do you think of the final product when compared to Ableton Live? Personally, I had a lot more fun producing something in Garageband then I ever did in Ableton Live, with the end result being really close. I was at the end of the road with Ableton but I know my work with Garageband will only improve with time.
The truth is I was a little disappointed with the final master of my first Garageband track. I was really hoping for an immediate step up in quality compared to Ableton Live, but the differences are much more subtle than that. That’s no fault of Garageband, that’s down to almost 10 years Ableton Live experience vs 2 months with Garageband.
This is only song #1, with song #2 already in progress.
Finally, and most tellingly, Garageband for iOS/iPad de-couples me from the desktop, the mic-stand, the monitor, and the keyboard. All those things I always thought I needed.
Now? I work on ideas on the sofa, in bed, in fact, anywhere the kids aren’t. I can boot up and be ready to go in 10 seconds. I don’t even need to be plugged in. I can even sling my iPad in a bag and go to a friend’s house to work on ideas together!
Oh, and if I hadn’t mentioned it before, it’s FREE!! (if you’ve got an iPad or an iPhone).
Wasn’t expecting that sort of quality from your first attempt with an iPad! I’m inspired.
I’ve been trying the PC/DAW route and having a nightmare! I’m a Windows/Android dyed-in-the-wool kind of guy, with no iDea about iPhones/iPads etc.
My fellow guitar player has a high spec Mac and we recorded a song together on Garageband with relative ease. We’re just a couple of old guys having a bit of fun.
But it never occurred to me that I could use an iPad. Does it have to be any particular spec?
I’ve seen one on Amazon for £289 “Apple 10.9-inch iPad (Wi-Fi, 64GB) – Silver (10th generation) -A14 Bionic chip with 6-core CPU and 4-core GPU “. Would this be OK?
Thank a lot Richard.
Even something like mine, a 7th or 8th Gen standard ipad would be fine.
Few things to take into account:
-Storage. Always better to go for the most you can to save time backing up songs all the time.
– USB audio interface.The newer ipads have a USB C rather than the lightning port, I currently use a presonus ione where I can connect to the ipad lighting direct, whereas with a USB C and something like a focusrite scarlett you’ll need extra hardware to make it work. Do your homework here before you buy anything.
Also, if you are happy to pay the subscription, the newer ipads are compatible with Garagebands big brother Logic Pro for ipad. Mine isn’t but then again I’m happy with Garageband.
Let me know how you get on I’ve got load more tutorials both here and on my YouTube channel (check the footer).
Cheers and good luck!
Yea makes sense, if it ain’t broke don’t fix it. I’m actually an iphone and mac user but no ipad, so this will be my first, just wanted to get your impressions on whether it would suit my needs.
Hi Andrew. Thanks for stopping by.
Honestly I don’t think the upgrade to the latest ipad is a necessity. The old one can handle GB fine, and you are always going to run out of space, whatever you do, so having a backup plan (iCloud, drive, external) is more important than HD capacity IMHO.
On the other hand, the upgrade will give you better performance, perhaps less latency and you’ll need to backup less frequently.
Your choice but for me I’ll stick to my existing IPad.
Exactly the discussion I needed to hear. What do you think of a 2021 gen 9 with 256 gigs? That’s the build I’m looking at