Fantastic post. I love the bold part BTW, this is spot on. I will say that Ableton compares a bit more favorably than perhaps Logic, (I don't know, I only used Logic briefly years ago), and certainly Cubase, whose attempts to be "hip" strike me as particularly quaint.saturdaysaint wrote:A lot of people feel this way about Reason (and remember: ttoz and I came to Reason from LOGIC) because the included patch/sound library is light years ahead of everybody else's (at least that I've tried recently). When you can get a stylish/modern drumkit, synth bass and pad without fishing through a sea of third-rate Jean Michael Jarre impersonations and/or stripping gimmicky effects off of something, it can be exponentially more useful. I get to a useful sound quicker in Reason than I did with Logic and Komplete, so for me, it's more valuable than those two combined in a very real sense.
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tl;dr It's a lot more complicated than dividing the price by the number of effects and synths
is reason the perfect option financially
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- KVRAF
- 16733 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
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- KVRian
- 996 posts since 14 Jun, 2012 from Toronto, Canada
I wanna go through the posts tomorrow and and then write a reply, but for now, I love it when you say a sea of third-rate Jean Michael Jarre impersonations. This is spot on. But too much to talk about here, to for tomorrow...ghettosynth wrote:Fantastic post. I love the bold part BTW, this is spot on. I will say that Ableton compares a bit more favorably than perhaps Logic, (I don't know, I only used Logic briefly years ago), and certainly Cubase, whose attempts to be "hip" strike me as particularly quaint.saturdaysaint wrote:A lot of people feel this way about Reason (and remember: ttoz and I came to Reason from LOGIC) because the included patch/sound library is light years ahead of everybody else's (at least that I've tried recently). When you can get a stylish/modern drumkit, synth bass and pad without fishing through a sea of third-rate Jean Michael Jarre impersonations and/or stripping gimmicky effects off of something, it can be exponentially more useful. I get to a useful sound quicker in Reason than I did with Logic and Komplete, so for me, it's more valuable than those two combined in a very real sense.
...
tl;dr It's a lot more complicated than dividing the price by the number of effects and synths
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- KVRian
- 806 posts since 26 Aug, 2005 from Oregon, USA
Logic at App store $149. Ableton Live $449.ghettosynth wrote: Fantastic post. I love the bold part BTW, this is spot on. I will say that Ableton compares a bit more favorably than perhaps Logic, (I don't know, I only used Logic briefly years ago), and certainly Cubase, whose attempts to be "hip" strike me as particularly quaint.
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- KVRAF
- 16733 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
Right, no doubt if you are talking bang for buck, logic is a bargain. A lot of producers swear by it and even really like its built in synths. I think that MFL moves live into awesomeville, so add another $249 or whatever MFL costs these days.ksandvik wrote:Logic at App store $149. Ableton Live $449.ghettosynth wrote: Fantastic post. I love the bold part BTW, this is spot on. I will say that Ableton compares a bit more favorably than perhaps Logic, (I don't know, I only used Logic briefly years ago), and certainly Cubase, whose attempts to be "hip" strike me as particularly quaint.
So, if you are talking pure bang for buck, IMHO, it's a copy of Reaper and a copy of CM magazine.
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- KVRist
- 220 posts since 16 Dec, 2006
That is of course the number one reason for choosing a tool. You should use the tool that makes you the most productive and/or gives you the most fun. I'd rather spend twice the money on something I love to use/do than using something that feels like a drag to work with.saturdaysaint wrote:I get to a useful sound quicker in Reason than I did with Logic and Komplete, so for me, it's more valuable than those two combined in a very real sense.
But for the question is reason the perfect option financially, my answer would be no. It is an expensive option no matter if you value it above all other software.
Well designed so there's no need to read the manual, but you need to delve deeper into the environment if you want to create sounds like the included combs or mimic other plugins. That would require reading the manuals wouldn't it?saturdaysaint wrote:Part of this is because they hire and attract great sound designers and make it a priority but I think it's also because Reason is a great sound design and programming environment. You'd need to dive deep into the Environment to reproduce a lot of the stock Combinators and/or Thor patches. The CV tools (Thor, Matrix, the Combinator, Pulsar, etc) make a lot of highly musical modulation and rhythmic effect options dead simple, and the Rack makes creative routing within a patch way more straightforward than in Logic, where you clutter up you sequencer/mixer with aux/send tracks to do a lot of fairly basic routing.
And unlike Logic, Reason's synths/effects are well designed enough that you can wrap your head around them without cracking the manual. God, Ultrabeat still makes my eyes bleed. In the time it takes you to figure out how to do one or two things with Logic's samplers, you're practically a power user in Reason.
Edit: Btw, I totally agree on Ultrabeat. Never used it except for the first few tryouts.. totally unlogical device.
EXS24 I find just as easy as NNXT though.
Tbh, many of the effects in Reason aren't that great. So I think it's the environment and workflow that is worth the money for people and not the included devices. I do acknowledge many of them was made a decade ago though, but that's what you've had to work with until now. RE fills that gap and that's why I've been more interested in Essential than the full version. If only it had Blocks which I think is a really (!) great workflow idea.saturdaysaint wrote:tl;dr It's a lot more complicated than dividing the price by the number of effects and synths
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- KVRAF
- 35671 posts since 11 Apr, 2010 from Germany
Isn't that because Logic doesn't get developed anymore, and it used to cost way more?ghettosynth wrote:
Right, no doubt if you are talking bang for buck, logic is a bargain.
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- KVRAF
- 12085 posts since 2 Dec, 2004 from North Wales
But then you have to have an overpriced underpowered MAC to run Logic, so Live on a PC is still cheaperksandvik wrote:Logic at App store $149. Ableton Live $449.ghettosynth wrote: Fantastic post. I love the bold part BTW, this is spot on. I will say that Ableton compares a bit more favorably than perhaps Logic, (I don't know, I only used Logic briefly years ago), and certainly Cubase, whose attempts to be "hip" strike me as particularly quaint.
Compairing 'list' prices of software is a bit off-the-mark. Logic is cheap, but many people get Live, Cubase etc. on the upgrade train (from a free lite licence) or in the sale (severl times a year 1/3 off, so $299 USD.
But yes, if you just want 'value' (rather than the right tool for you based on years of trying everything and often going back to stuff you have given up on!) then Reaper + all the great free stuff is still a very porffesional set up with more great sounds than any one will use in a life time (all the free NI players, Alchemy player, Brazille, Zebralette and all the great CM free instruments to name but a few)
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- KVRian
- 996 posts since 14 Jun, 2012 from Toronto, Canada
Am I the only one who thinks Ableton is really overpriced?
Sonar, FL and Reaper I look at and their prices are agreeable.
Well, back on the topic (somewhat) Logic is no-brainer for mac users. I used to love the Logic synths, but now I've forgotten what they sound like.
EDIT: Oh yeah, I maintain that the best financial option is almost always Sonar. I think many are too quick to jump on Reason just because that's 'all they will need to spend.'
Sonar, FL and Reaper I look at and their prices are agreeable.
Well, back on the topic (somewhat) Logic is no-brainer for mac users. I used to love the Logic synths, but now I've forgotten what they sound like.
EDIT: Oh yeah, I maintain that the best financial option is almost always Sonar. I think many are too quick to jump on Reason just because that's 'all they will need to spend.'
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- KVRAF
- 7489 posts since 6 Jul, 2004
It's around the same price as Reason 6.5, although street prices for both do fluctuate, so worth looking around.schnapsglas wrote:Am I the only one who thinks Ableton is really overpriced?
Sonar, FL and Reaper I look at and their prices are agreeable.
Software prices are ultimately hard to judge, but both Ableton and Reason seem to sit in the middle - in a crude feature-per-dollar analysis they cost:
+ more than Reaper or Logic, which hence look like bargains
+ similar to Sonar, which is generally considered a fairly good deal (but seems to have a reputation for being prone to bugs)
+ but cheaper than Pro Tools and Cubase, which seem over-priced.
As others have said, it's more important to buy what best suits you as a musician, and that's why I have bought Reason and Live and stuck with them over so many years (in both cases, more than a decade now).
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- Banned
- 432 posts since 12 Apr, 2012
Yes, Ableton is overpriced, and every single update was at least 99€. Let alone live-instruments. But, at least, it runs both on mac and pc, has no dongle and the license lets you play it on two different machines. Reaper is still cheap for "common people", but if you are a pro you have to pay 225$, so not so cheap, considering it is not cubase, logic or protools.schnapsglas wrote:Am I the only one who thinks Ableton is really overpriced?
Sonar, FL and Reaper I look at and their prices are agreeable.
Well, back on the topic (somewhat) Logic is no-brainer for mac users. I used to love the Logic synths, but now I've forgotten what they sound like.
EDIT: Oh yeah, I maintain that the best financial option is almost always Sonar. I think many are too quick to jump on Reason just because that's 'all they will need to spend.'
Logic is only for mac, but at the same time the Sonar option is only for PC.
Regarding Reason: that is neither a DAW, nor a vst (like for instance Reaktor), that is why for what it offers it should cost half the price.
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- KVRian
- 624 posts since 22 Jan, 2003 from USA
Everything is priced what the market will bear. If it isn't, then the seller changes the price. If the prices aren't changing, then the sellers feel they are getting a good deal and the buyers feel like they are getting a good deal. It's not complicated, its been this way since people started selling things.
Individuals that think its too high or to low either buy it or don't, but its the "collective" wallet that decides the price.
Individuals that think its too high or to low either buy it or don't, but its the "collective" wallet that decides the price.
-="I beat the Internet...the end guy is hard"=-
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- Banned
- 432 posts since 12 Apr, 2012
"dirty capxxxxxxts" ?drez wrote:Everything is priced what the market will bear. If it isn't, then the seller changes the price. If the prices aren't changing, then the sellers feel they are getting a good deal and the buyers feel like they are getting a good deal. It's not complicated, its been this way since people started selling things.
Individuals that think its too high or to low either buy it or don't, but its the "collective" wallet that decides the price.
- KVRAF
- 26033 posts since 20 Oct, 2007 from gonesville
The use of "hip" here I find "quaint"ghettosynth wrote:I will say that Ableton compares a bit more favorably [with Reason] than perhaps Logic, (I don't know, I only used Logic briefly years ago), and certainly Cubase, whose attempts to be "hip" strike me as particularly quaint.
But I don't object to Steinberg keeping up somewhat with *Feature Requests* and keeping up with the market, clearly competing somewhat with Ableton with the Arranger Track or whatever it's called. Some call it 'bloat'.
*what is hip* UNNNH.
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- KVRian
- 996 posts since 14 Jun, 2012 from Toronto, Canada
I hate that 'hip' nonsense.jancivil wrote: But I don't object to Steinberg keeping up somewhat with *Feature Requests* and keeping up with the market, clearly competing somewhat with Ableton with the Arranger Track or whatever it's called.
*what is hip* UNNNH.
One day I tried to use Live 'properly' by actually mapping out scenes and so on. And I realised I basically recorded each track onto single scene and spend the rest in the arranger window.
FL was far more tolerable. I regret not spending more time with it, while my Cubase Artist doesn't batch export, refuses to give me license to route signals freely (who would have thought by going to digital we would be prohibited routing such way?)
There are far more important things for Steinberg. Getting that VST bridge sorted out would be a start. I feel as if we are all marching towards... Dubturbo.