CORRECTION: Using Cubuse increases your difficult workflow!the_nihilist wrote:Using Cubase increases your talent 20-40%.
And unless the workflow is smooth like FL Studio, Cubase ain't shit!!!
CORRECTION: Using Cubuse increases your difficult workflow!the_nihilist wrote:Using Cubase increases your talent 20-40%.
To be honest, once you wrap your head around the cubase workflow, and learn to use the keyboard commands, it moves much smoother than FL.TVD wrote:CORRECTION: Using Cubuse increases your difficult workflow!the_nihilist wrote:Using Cubase increases your talent 20-40%.
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And unless the workflow is smooth like FL Studio, Cubase ain't shit!!!
how most arguments are at kvrHink wrote:you hear it so it's there? Bullockseyeknow666 wrote:All I really care about is how things mix and set with each other.
Just try comparing protools to (I'll bow out of the name s because it's not polite) and see what happens.
I'm sorry I can hear it clearly.
Anyways.....I'm outee.......I wish there was a way to get people to stop saying ITS A VOLUME THING but I can't so........cool.....mo power to ya........
As a FLStudio user, I disagree with all of those. No one has ever told me my music sounds like it was made in FLthe_nihilist wrote:There is NO difference in sound between the two programs if you use the same plugins and bit/samplerate. PERIOD. None. Zero. This isn't even an issue.Debutante wrote:..apparently these two programs are good enough against each other to spark this heated sort of debate. I've read so many forums that have had this argument before. My take is that both have their strengths and weakneses, but either one only gives you an environment to work in...quite literally a room which you fill with your own sounds.
Now, as far the REAL "better than thou" argument is concerned, what I would like to know is this: If you took a single synth, say Absynth, and used the same presets in either program, is one of them going to sound better than the other? And if so, how is it better and why? Is one program rendering to wav better than the other, or providing more depth with the same reverb plugin or giving a wider stereo or a richer, thicker chorus with the same plugin, and IS THIS OCCURENCE CONSTANT?...Those are the questions I think would really define a "better" program; their ability to crunch numbers. But, if you can use the same instrument and get the same quality sound from both applications, then everything else is moot. The rest would just be personal preferences; based on everything from the technicalities of workflow all the way down to something as petty as cosmetics.
....so would someone familiar with both applications please be kind and patient enough to, using the same instruments, samples and presets, produce the same short little something in Cubase and FL Studio and post it for us to hear. Maybe some tests, like ani-aliasing could be done. Let everyone judge the difference if there is any, and decide what is "better", and how so. There would quite likely be some minor differnces, but would it mean that you were able to achieve specific effects, or combinations in one application that you couldn't in the other?
My feeling is that creativity lies with the writer. Don't blame your tools - if you can't sound good in one program, using the same instruments, I really doubt it will sound better in the other application.
Honestly, I still don't know why there is that "FL Sound". Its just something that I can tell almost instantly about a song -- this piece was made in FL Studio. I have a few theories about this:
1) The FL Playlist subconciously lulls you into using small patterns for everything, and repeating them. This results in a song that is built up from repeating, identical pieces.
2) Having the volume and panning controls in the mixer subconciously makes you just set volume and panning as static parameters. Also, its a bit annoying to try and make smooth volume changes over a few bars, so things are generally left without much changes in volume or balance.
3) "People will probably bitch about presets if I use them on the synths, but they can't possibly notice that I'm using the Cathedral setting on the FL Verb."
4) FL's piano roll and playlist will make you quantize EVERYTHING. Even if you're playing is really close to being in time, it gives you an unnatural urge to quantize that cannot be resisted.
Thats my best guess to why we have the whole "FL Sound" argument, based on my experiences with FL.
EXACTLY! I often find the same thing in hardware owners...Hink wrote:TBH I think the biggest problem and why so many people bash FL is the price. I think the bashers saw the price wrote it off as being junk. As it is clear that it is not junk,those people have to keep defending to themselves why they paid much more. I think that probably 75% of the attacks on FL is because of just this...they're mad at themselves for not going with it.
point made thenfunkadil wrote:That was hilarious. The phenomenon happened within the explaination.
....except that it's way more comfortable (IMHO) to use soft studios to make some fast tracks than to spend too much time trying to master a soft sequencer's learning curve.the_nihilist wrote:To be honest, once you wrap your head around the cubase workflow, and learn to use the keyboard commands, it moves much smoother than FL.TVD wrote:CORRECTION: Using Cubuse increases your difficult workflow!the_nihilist wrote:Using Cubase increases your talent 20-40%.
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And unless the workflow is smooth like FL Studio, Cubase ain't shit!!!
Likewise. I'd say more that people are generally surprised that what I play for them was done in FL... The program that they've already pirated and couldn't figure out quickly enough to accomplish anything withChase Altertone wrote:As a FLStudio user, I disagree with all of those. No one has ever told me my music sounds like it was made in FLthe_nihilist wrote:Honestly, I still don't know why there is that "FL Sound". I...Debutante wrote:..apparently these two programs are good enough against each other to spark this heated sort of debate. I've read so many for...f you can't sound good in one program, using the same instruments, I really doubt it will sound better in the other application.
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