sqigls wrote:Cubase for life baby
+100
I switched from Cubase 8.5 to...Cubase 9.seamoss wrote:sqigls wrote:Cubase for life baby
+100
It's really not a huge learning curve, It took me less than a week on the demo to figure everything out. It's definitely tailored for EDM and other genres with repetitive melodies, thus the system of painting clips onto the timeline. For me the mixer was the only thing I couldn't quite wrap my head around, I never figured out how to sidechain properly. I highly doubt I'll ever switch DAWs, I've been using live 7 since I was 11 IIRC. I can definitely see myself picking up FL or BitWig as a secondary DAW, though - I don't think I could go through life only using Live 7woggle wrote:I had not really thought of FL until today but just installed it and am trying it as a VSTi within Reaper - so far it seems very good and I will keep testing until the January sales drop the price a little (or I lose interest). I figure if I only use the midi it should not be a huge learning curve. Also Reaper is pretty good for audio anyway. Completely agree on the learning effort though - you really need a strong reason to shift DAWs if youve been on the same one for a few years.zenophilix wrote:I wanted to switch to FL earlier this year, but eventually decided learning a new DAW wasn't worth it. A friend shared his FL license file with me last week, though, which I was hyped about. Then I discovered sharing licenses is against the TOS, and it turned out to be a cracked license anyway, so that ended quickly.
Nobody, Ever wrote:I have enough plugins.
i'm still on 6.5BERFAB wrote:I switched from Cubase 8.5 to...Cubase 9.seamoss wrote:sqigls wrote:Cubase for life baby
+100
Glad I did. That thing just keeps on gettin better.
-B
Yup, really this. I was thinking about the crazy 'journey' lately. Mine went from FL Studio (which I still love and use for ideas) -> Energy XT -> Project 5.2 -> Tracktion -> Sonar Home -> EnergyXT2 -> Sonar 5, 6, 7 -> Reaper -> Cubase 5, 6.5, 7.5, 9.sqigls wrote:Cubase for life baby
this is why I have never really looked at FL - I don't make pop/rock/dance stuff much at all - I go way back to the late 70s making musique concrete using tape / But once you drop the snap feature the FL playlist becomes more like Reaper free item positioning mode - perhaps even more powerful.zenophilix wrote:It's definitely tailored for EDM and other genres with repetitive melodies, thus the system of painting clips onto the timeline.
wow... welcome to kvr forum with your first postBonafide wrote:Well I started in the 80's with a TR-505, D-50, DX7, D-110, MT32, alpha Juno 2, Alesis HR-16 & D4, EPS16, TR-909, R-50 and a MC-500 sequencer. 93' I started working with Cakewalk, followed by Acid then Fruity Loops. I initially enjoyed Fruity Loops because I could lay my drums down so fast like i could with the TR-505, I can sample/import .wav files, chop and timestretch them in minutes. My favorite sample based producers use Ableton so I wanted to see what it was that they like so much about Ableton. I've recently purchased an APCmini and nativeKontrol Arsenal Control Surface scripts, I'm not looking back.
That does remind me, technically I did switch DAWs for about a week. My dad snagged a used Mac Pro with Logic X Pro installed on it, so we've been trying to learn how to use it. We both find it illogical. He also has DP7 that he's installed, which I find to be confusing. Still more natural than Logic, though.paradiddle wrote:Still in Ableton. However since buying a macbook pro, gotta a chance to get reacquainted with logic since it was discontinued on the pc. Plenty of old projects still work which is great. The price is a joke with what you get. Alchemy yeah!
Other smaller ones I use depending on what I do: Mulab, tracktion and audiomulch (not sure I'd call it a daw) for drones, ambiences and weird stuff.
Nobody, Ever wrote:I have enough plugins.
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