By: [Author Name] | Date: [Current Date]
★★★★☆ (4.5/5) Deducting half a star for Intel Mac performance regressions and the lack of a native LUFS target in the Master Assistant.
| Machine | Logic 10.7.9 Max Tracks | Logic 10.8 Max Tracks | Improvement | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | M1 Max (64GB) | 180 | 210 | +16% | | M2 Pro (32GB) | 210 | 275 | +31% | | M3 Max (128GB) | 250 | 380 | | | Intel i9 (2019) | 90 | 65 (CPU overloads) | -28% | logic 10.8
Apple is no longer treating Logic as a niche hobbyist tool. With , they are betting that the future of music production lies in assisted creation —not replacing the artist, but removing the friction between idea and arrangement.
When Apple acquired Emagic back in 2002, few predicted that Logic Pro would eventually become the default digital audio workstation (DAW) for a generation of hitmakers. Fast forward to today, and the release of marks a pivotal moment. This is not merely a bug-fix iteration; it is a philosophical shift toward AI-assisted creativity, deep Dolby Atmos integration, and performance optimization tailored specifically for Apple Silicon. By: [Author Name] | Date: [Current Date] ★★★★☆
If you’ve been sitting on the fence, back up your current version, update, and spend an hour with the new Session Bass Player. You might just write your next track in half the time.
This article was written using Logic Pro 10.8.0 on an M2 Pro MacBook Pro (macOS Sonoma 14.2). When Apple acquired Emagic back in 2002, few
Session Players output MIDI, not audio. This means you can replace their sounds with any third-party plugin (e.g., Kontakt, Omnisphere) while keeping the AI-generated performance. 3. Mastering Assistant: Your AI Second Engineer In previous versions, Logic required you to bounce your mix, re-import it, and apply third-party limiters. Logic 10.8 introduces Mastering Assistant —a real-time, AI-powered plugin that sits on your Stereo Out channel.