80% of that can be done in Scaler 2. The only difference is the workflow, as there isn't really a massive functional gap.apoclypse wrote: ↑Fri Apr 19, 2024 5:10 pmThat’s pretty cool. On the flip side Logics arp is a bit easier to use (imo), has a built in sequencer and also has silent capture and an add mode so you can play in what you want the arp to playback.xbitz wrote: ↑Fri Apr 19, 2024 4:46 pm ^^^
this is not a difference between the 2 DAWs, I didn't mention it.
Screenshot 2024-04-19 at 18.40.58.png
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btw. you can also drop MIDI clips into the Cubase arp plugin, and it can adapt them to chords; I don't think (AFAIK) Logic has anything like this
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cY9JxhXUo2I
8:30 > also a good stuff
Not as nice as dragging and dropping in midi but still pretty useful.
The main question for the user is: "How much is that extra convenience worth to you, in dollars?"
Would I switch from Cubase to Logic, no. I don't see the point. I'd probably just stop upgrading Cubase and only switch once my version fell out of compatibility with macOS - if I were intent on staying with that platform.
It is not worth the loss in productivity and most conversations nit picking details aren't quite going to play out that way in the real world for everyone.
I generally play 75% of my MIDI in, so I'm not too concerned with chord features these days. When I was greener, that would have been a bigger selling point, though that was before every controller on earth had all of this built into the firmware.