Mushy Mushy wrote:Oh yeah that makes sense. Looking at a pixelated two line display vs a 2X" colour screen.pdxindy wrote:With your current setup, can you browse the Live library and load an instrument on a track, add some effects, and set the length of and record a clip on that track without looking at the computer screen at all?
I never understand this thinking. Don't want to make electronic music while looking at a computer? Buy yourself a tape deck, some analog synths and MPC and STFU.
I came from using hardware drum machines/grooveboxes/samplers/etc, and I'll tell you one thing I know about all of them. They mostly suck due to their display and menu diving to get to advanced features. When computers came out it was a god-send. (Borg send?) When Apple introduced the mouse and graphical user interface computers became easy to manipulate and thus super powerful tools for music and other art forms. Sure, some things they suck at, like note input or even "clip triggering" but we have great hardware interfaces for these things, but the day you show me a hardware controller or instrument that lets you browse though content better than even Windows 3.1 is the day I'll eat my trackball.
I'll never buy Push. I don't make music or perform that way. I tried it once... didn't like it. I'm not saying it's wrong or bad, but it's not for me. I was using a keyboard to launch clips I had pre-recorded as well as perform some live lines and I was bored. I'm an "instrumentalist." My hands are happy when they're on a guitar or keyboard.
Is Push good? Is it better than Maschine? Better than an APC40? Better than MPD32? MPC Renaissance? I have no idea, but I imagine if you like Live and you do that sort of live clip launch style of music you'll dig it. If not, it's not like you don't have awesome choices for hardware controllers.