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Re: Recording Programs?
So let me get this straight,does the software itself
has an effect also on the sound quality? all these
software claim to be used in professional
studios,Sonar,Cubase,Logic,Nuendo,Protools i was
always under the impression that it was the hardware
that matter as far as sound qualitiy,so does cubase or
logic sound better that sonar indepedently from
hardware?
Luis
--- Per Boysen <perboysen@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 25 jun 2007, at 11.53, Stephen Goodman wrote:
>
> > Hi folks,
> >
> > I'm an old, old Cool Edit Pro user, and while I've
> been quite happy
> > with its multitracking etc., I look around and see
> what everyone
> > else is using once in a while.
> >
> > A look at the TapeOp (now available in the UK,
> thanks!) mentions
> > Pro Tools quite a lot. But a look at the product
> tells me that
> > this is the kind of full-on hardware-software
> system sales bit that
> > Avid has been getting people to pay too much for,
> for some time -
> > if not also an efficient barrier to keep the
> so-called 'amateurs'
> > out of the mainstream of studio works. (Hell, it
> didn't work for
> > the reel-to-reel, cassette, DAT, VHS, CD or DVD -
> so now it's done
> > with a software-hardware combo)
> >
> > So much for my attitude! But it does beg the
> questions:
> >
> > 1. What recording program do you use?
> > 2. Why? Is there something you get from your
> program that you
> > can't anywhere else?
>
>
> --> My first choice is Logic Pro.
> What I get from Logic is an application that is made
> for people that
> do not only edit audio but also compose. Logic has
> been the leading
> application for MIDI sequencing since its birth
> somewhere back in -93
> and I think it gives more bang for the bucks than
> andy other DAW. It
> is a system for composing and producing music that
> is working very
> well on its own, so you don't need to buy any extra
> third party plug-
> ins. Logic has all the audio effect plug-ins and
> software instruments
> you'll ever need for production work (FM synthesis,
> Subtractive
> Synthesis, Modular Synthesis and a great sampler).
> It also has some
> Max-like functionality for routing and transforming
> both real-time
> MIDI streams and recorded MIDI events (the
> Environment). I left
> Cubase for Logic back at version 2.0 (we're now
> waiting for 8.0)
> mainly because of the better MIDI timing. When Apple
> bought Emagic
> (that developed Logic) and killed the Windows
> version, I bought
> Cubase SX to see if it would be a good way to stay
> with the Windows
> PC platform. However, Cubase felt like a very bad
> tool in comparison,
> so I decided to buy my next PC from Apple and stick
> with Logic. This
> was also a decision I made after checking out the
> specifications for
> OS X; it was pretty obvious that OS X would be a
> better audio and
> music operating system for PC's. A final option of
> Logic's that means
> a lot to me is the built-in global micro tonal
> tuning system. Since
> all the synths and the sampler are part of the
> application they all
> adapt to whatever micro scale you chose in the
> global preferences.
> When using synths I definitely want to go micro
> tonal. With guitars
> and wind instruments that doesn't matter much
> because intonation of
> pitch is done while playing.
>
> --> My second choice is Ableton Live.
> I like Live because it works the same on OS X and
> Window XP (I
> wouldn't dare to get Vista for at least another
> year, until all audio
> software manage to catch up). Live has easy routing
> possibilities and
> if you run it on a Mac you can open the OS X
> built-in MIDI pipes
> directly in Lives mixer to send MIDI data to, or
> fetch from, other
> parallel applications. Or just send controller data
> into some plug-in
> on a different channel in Live. Under Windows you
> can achieve the
> same routing capability by installing the
> third-party OS Hack MIDI
> Yoke. I'm not very keen on the audio fidelity of
> Live though. When I
> make music in Live I move the audio files over to
> Logic ASAP because
> everything sounds better there. One powerful combo
> is to run Live as
> a ReWire slave to Logic. Live is in many ways a kind
> of music
> instrument with its own sound and powerful audio
> mangling capability.
> I just don't see it as a high end finalizing tool.
>
> --> The recording program I use most is Mobius.
> It has a function that renders a stereo file of the
> merged audio
> processes going on in the looper. You simply push
> record and make
> music for a while and there you have an almost
> finished recording in
> pristine 32 bit floating point wave format waiting
> for you on the
> hard drive.
>
> I don't own the latest version, but I have been
> checking out Protools
> a bit. If you don't mind being locked into using
> audio interfaces
> from Digidesign that's a good recording application.
> At least as far
> as audio matters. Cubase is also good in the audio
> department these
> days. And if you need good surround mixing tools and
> will work with
> soundtracks Nuendo is a good choice.
>
> Greetings from Sweden
>
> Per Boysen
> www.boysen.se (Swedish)
> www.looproom.com (international)
>
>
>
>
>
www.myspace.com/luisangulocom
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