Logic pro 7 Workshop Using The EVB3
Vintage instruments such as the Hammond B3 continue to enjoy popularity and are increasingly being emulated in software. Mark Cousins plays with Logic’s EVB3.

If there’s one thing that distinguishes Logic Pro from the competition it has to be its thoroughness and attention to detail. Take the EVB3, for example – one of the Vintage Instrument suite of plug-ins first introduced in Logic 5. The EVB3 includes an unprecedented number of controls to model even the most minor quirks of the original instrument (from filter age to drawbar leakage), as well as incorporating incredibly detailed MIDI implementation. But therein lies a problem: although the EVB3 produces an authentic enough sound, its knob-laden interface makes it look more like a modular synthesizer than an instrument that invites itself to be played.
This feature first appeared in Music Tech Magazine issue 40
Filed under
Software Workshops,
Logic Tutorials
Sign in to download this article
New users, please register here
See also...
MTM 63 |
Ableton Live 7 Workshop |
MTM 62 |
Logic Pro 8 Workshop - Compressor |
|
MTM 62 |
Cubase 4 Workshop - Built-in Instruments |
MTM 62 |
Jupiter-8V Workshop - Galaxy Modulator |
|
MTM 62 |
Reason 4 Workshop - Creative ReDrum |
MTM 62 |
Ableton Live 7 Workshop - Beat Slicing |
|
MTM 59 |
Cubase 4.1 Workshop: Using the Sample Editor |
MTM 59 |
Logic Pro 8 Workshop: Audio editing |

















