Interesting. I'm Logic for the big things and GarageBand for the quick and dirty. Though, new iMac means I can launch Logic fast fast fast now so I'm using GB less and less and less.Logic for big things and Reaper for the quick and dirty.
Interesting. I'm Logic for the big things and GarageBand for the quick and dirty. Though, new iMac means I can launch Logic fast fast fast now so I'm using GB less and less and less.Logic for big things and Reaper for the quick and dirty.
SAME HERE !!There is no best. I use Reaper, for more reasons than I have time to mention.
Presonus Studio One. Try the free Studio one prime, and see it for yourself..
I had no idea Passport was still around. MTP version 1.0 was the first sequencer I ever used (on a Mac Plus).Master Tracks Pro and SAW
I had Master Tracks Pro 3 or 4 on my PC. I miss it. I spent a lot of time working with it and learned it quite well. Paid a lot of money for it, like $200 or $300. I did get a copy of SAW from a friend and I think it ran on dos? Never did much with it tho.I had no idea Passport was still around. MTP version 1.0 was the first sequencer I ever used (on a Mac Plus).
I looked at SAW early on, but it was too expensive. Back then, having a DAW written in assembly code was a great benefit though.
I had Master Tracks Pro 3 or 4 on my PC. I miss it. I spent a lot of time working with it and learned it quite well. Paid a lot of money for it, like $200 or $300. I did get a copy of SAW from a friend and I think it ran on dos? Never did much with it tho.
There's a pickup line...Reaper on my end.
I'm not an expert, but in Reaper you can certainly modify the pitch of an item without affecting its duration, you can also time adjust without affecting pitch of an item. If that's what your question was? You can also speed up or slow down a project with or without pitch adjustment. (handy for learning new tracks)Do Reaper & Cubase have features that can accomplish the detailed editing in Logic, namely Flex-time and Flex-pitch? (Logic user and Reaper owner here)
Currently on Mac Pro and ProTools. Taking a serious look at updating to an iMac 5k and running Logic Pro.
No. The 5k is not the price it is the retina display. I have been looking at the iMac with logic pro. I hate the idea of learning new recording software. I am a seasoned ProTools user. The iMac I am looking at is just over 3 grand. My Mac Pro was state of the art in its day, but it is a Macasaurus at this point. Even at 3 grand the 5k iMac is very expensive, at least to me. I am a retiree and living on a broke income now (it was fixed when I had a job, but it's broke now that I don't). You can check out the 5k iMac at Apple Store. I am looking at a beefed up one so I can mix with it. Sorry for the confusion amigo.I'm waiting to see if they announce new mac pros. I have a feeling they will be cost prohibitive because the imac pros already sound ridiculous ($5K for the entry level?). I'd like to go back to the mac for music and video production but I've got a feeling they are pricing most of us out.
Yep, I had a Music Quest 32 thingy too, as recomemded by Bret Hanson at Mahoney’s Drum Shop.I'm sure you already know that Bob Lentini, the creator of SAW, lives here in Vegas. He was ahead of his time when computers needed all the code efficiency a programmer could muster. I've seen SAW being run at certain events here. I might try the demo out of pure curiosity.
Thinking about all of this makes me want to break out my Music Quest MXQ-32M.