Really? I was in the impression that Studio One was not good about MIDI, and V3 fixed some of it.xphen0m wrote:Cakewalk really need to improve Sonar's MIDI functionality. It is light years behind Cubase (especially), even Studio One and even REAPER (which is saying something because REAPER is still abysmal for midi).
Introducing the new SONAR: New lineup, new features, plus membership
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- KVRian
- 1265 posts since 3 Jul, 2009
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AROSSA [Cakewalk] AROSSA [Cakewalk] https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=312199
- KVRist
- 80 posts since 10 Sep, 2013 from Boston
Saw some questions about the Synth Recording. For those wanting to learn more about synth recording and some of the latest features, here are some new videos:
Synth Recording:
Drum Replacer:
Style Dials:
Start Screen:
Synth Recording:
Drum Replacer:
Style Dials:
Start Screen:
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AROSSA [Cakewalk] AROSSA [Cakewalk] https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=312199
- KVRist
- 80 posts since 10 Sep, 2013 from Boston
SONAR Lexington update is now available:
http://www.cakewalk.com/Products/SONAR/ ... #Lexington
In case you missed any of the other updates, here's a year end review:
http://www.cakewalk.com/Products/SONAR/Year-In-Review
http://www.cakewalk.com/Products/SONAR/ ... #Lexington
In case you missed any of the other updates, here's a year end review:
http://www.cakewalk.com/Products/SONAR/Year-In-Review
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- KVRian
- 933 posts since 28 Jan, 2008
I will not renew my Sonar subscription in January. I do a lot of MIDI work, and working with MIDI in Sonar was a nightmare for me. Cubase is still the king there, which is now my one and only DAW and it's going to stay that way.
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- KVRAF
- 7540 posts since 7 Aug, 2003 from San Francisco Bay Area
Just out of curiosity, what makes it a nightmare? What is missing that you require and which Cubase provides?xphen0m wrote:I will not renew my Sonar subscription in January. I do a lot of MIDI work, and working with MIDI in Sonar was a nightmare for me. Cubase is still the king there, which is now my one and only DAW and it's going to stay that way.
Incomplete list of my gear: 1/8" audio input jack.
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- KVRian
- 933 posts since 28 Jan, 2008
Here's an example:
There's no easy way to do legato the way I can do it Cubase. In Sonar, I have to use a CAL script. I hate this because CAL doesn't function properly a majority of the time. Sometimes when I load it, it'll do something weird with the selected midi, but put a legato'd copy down at the bottom of the PRV. I have the erase this and try it again. In Cubase, there's a legato button that has options. One click, done. This is just one example.
Editing MIDI in Sonar in general was just not user friendly. I was hopeful that this Sonar subscription would bring new MIDI functions (especially after Cakewalk's little questionnaire a while ago).....but nope. So I will wait until I see something "good" done to improve midi editing before I blow cash on Sonar again. That's what I should've done the first time.
The only thing I liked from the subscription was the Drum Replacer, and maybe one other thing. I also liked the synth recording. But synth recording wasn't a big deal to me, honestly.
There's no easy way to do legato the way I can do it Cubase. In Sonar, I have to use a CAL script. I hate this because CAL doesn't function properly a majority of the time. Sometimes when I load it, it'll do something weird with the selected midi, but put a legato'd copy down at the bottom of the PRV. I have the erase this and try it again. In Cubase, there's a legato button that has options. One click, done. This is just one example.
Editing MIDI in Sonar in general was just not user friendly. I was hopeful that this Sonar subscription would bring new MIDI functions (especially after Cakewalk's little questionnaire a while ago).....but nope. So I will wait until I see something "good" done to improve midi editing before I blow cash on Sonar again. That's what I should've done the first time.
The only thing I liked from the subscription was the Drum Replacer, and maybe one other thing. I also liked the synth recording. But synth recording wasn't a big deal to me, honestly.
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- KVRAF
- 7540 posts since 7 Aug, 2003 from San Francisco Bay Area
Hmm. I don't think I've ever tried to use a MIDI sequencer in a legato mode. That is usually something I expect a synth to do as an interpretation of the incoming note data.
Otherwise, you didn't really list anything other than it not being user friendly. I've always found it to be extremely user friendly, and it still remains my favorite MIDI editor since StudioVision. I never got along very well with Cubase.
Not that I'm trying to persuade you- your opinion is what it is. I'm just curious to learn more about why it works so well for me and not for others.
Otherwise, you didn't really list anything other than it not being user friendly. I've always found it to be extremely user friendly, and it still remains my favorite MIDI editor since StudioVision. I never got along very well with Cubase.
Not that I'm trying to persuade you- your opinion is what it is. I'm just curious to learn more about why it works so well for me and not for others.
Incomplete list of my gear: 1/8" audio input jack.
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- KVRian
- 933 posts since 28 Jan, 2008
Not a "legato mode". A "legato function". I wouldn't be playing in automatic legato. I'm talking about a function where once everything is recorded, in Cubase for example, I use the legato function to create an automatic legato between all notes.deastman wrote:Hmm. I don't think I've ever tried to use a MIDI sequencer in a legato mode. That is usually something I expect a synth to do as an interpretation of the incoming note data.
This was a big one for me because I use that feature after every take in Cubase. In Sonar, it took a lot of time to get it right.
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- KVRAF
- 7094 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from Sweden
You should be able to do that in a flash with CAL script in Sonar.xphen0m wrote:Not a "legato mode". A "legato function". I wouldn't be playing in automatic legato. I'm talking about a function where once everything is recorded, in Cubase for example, I use the legato function to create an automatic legato between all notes.deastman wrote:Hmm. I don't think I've ever tried to use a MIDI sequencer in a legato mode. That is usually something I expect a synth to do as an interpretation of the incoming note data.
This was a big one for me because I use that feature after every take in Cubase. In Sonar, it took a lot of time to get it right.
I modified an existing script for duration on notes since drumspads created too short ones, and it was not hard to do.
Unfortunately Cakewalk does not promote CAL that much, so I guess majority does not even know about it.
EDIT: sorry, I did not read back enough.
Check out the AutoLegato MFX here:
http://www.tencrazy.com/gadgets/mfx/
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AROSSA [Cakewalk] AROSSA [Cakewalk] https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=312199
- KVRist
- 80 posts since 10 Sep, 2013 from Boston
Sneak preview of the new mastering plugins coming to SONAR this spring:
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- KVRian
- 1359 posts since 5 Mar, 2005
@AROSSA, I hope more than just redesigned Mastering effects (wich are old plugins) is coming to Sonar in the next release. I was very happy to see the extended routing capabilities and other added functionality brought to Sonar many months ago but lately updates seem skimpy and bloat-ware like. I hope to get more of the type of features and functionality I like and not more of the stuff that disappointed me with Cakewalk these last many years (skimpy and bloat-ware). So far I seen a few good things from these new Rolling-Updates and I hope more is coming before my update-permit expires and I'm required to pay again, I may not reach for my wallet other-wise.
T2 Icarus is a must. SonicCore SCOPE is the most. As heart of studio it has my vote, cause XITE-1 is all she wrote.
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- KVRist
- 325 posts since 24 Sep, 2012
There has been some bloat but not nearly as much as other stuff. I don't care about the style dials, LANDR or the synths that they updated but you can't deny there have been vast improvements and features in the past year. Melodyne 4, Patch Points, Synth Recording, Upsampling on playback, Clip exporting, Drum replacer, vocal sync, the new midi engine... not to mention the bug fixes that we get every single month. Plus, some of what they've already announced for spring like the new UI themes, library and mastering update all look very promising.