FUCK I JUST WROTE THE HUGEST POST AND MY INTERNET DIED.
Anyways.... Production just takes a ridiculously long time. And hardly anyone synthesizes their own drum samples, most people use analog gear for that or they record actual hits, or steal it from a song that already exists. XFER is a great sample pack from Deadmau5 if you want to do EDM production.
The best advice I can give you is to just jump into your software, and start fucking around. If you see a knob on one of logic's software synths and you don't know what it does... Start playing around with it. Turn it all the way up and listen, then turn it all the way down and listen... Thats how you learn synthesis lol, at least at first.
There's a button in logic at the top left that says Bounce Region... This is your new best friend, use it wisely.
And try to utilize the full range of your software's capabilities... You can do just about anything with software now, especially logic, so its a good idea to learn how as much different stuff works. In electronic music especially, you need to be creative in a broader way than just like... interesting melodies. Its important to be creative with the ways you use your software and plugins, thats how you get interesting noises and cool rhythms and stuff.
This first track took me maybe 3 hours from beginning to end, I grabbed my microkorg, got a basic idea, and just banged off audio parts and crudely threw them together haha. Not the greatest song, but the finished product was fairly rewarding.
The Signal by MattStarker
This second one probably took me around 40 or 50 hours for the whole thing... This one was all done with MIDI, in logic, I made literally every single sound in it from scratch.
Mandrakes for Sid by MattStarker
I saw a post from Excision on another forum, in a thread about production schools. He basically told people that they should save their money to pay rent and buy ramen and juice boxes while they spend a year in their basment putting in 10 hour days on their software...I can't emphasize the importance of that advice enough, an expensive school or a secret plugin will not help you get that great sound or that catchy melody, its just hours upon hours of hard work.
I'm no world class producer but I know a bit about this stuff... I love to talk production when I can so feel free to ask some questions if you have any. What exactly are you trying to produce? Ie dubstep, house, IDM...