Sundog Song Studio v. Captain Plugins v. Scaler?
- KVRAF
- 2404 posts since 3 Mar, 2010
Hi Everyone,
I am considering purchasing one of these chord progression tools. Does anyone have any thoughts regarding the relative merits of these three programs, or is there another one (around this price) that I should also be considering?
Thanks in advance for your thoughts!
I am considering purchasing one of these chord progression tools. Does anyone have any thoughts regarding the relative merits of these three programs, or is there another one (around this price) that I should also be considering?
Thanks in advance for your thoughts!
- KVRAF
- 5381 posts since 25 Jan, 2014 from The End of The World as We Knowit
If you give more specific information about your skills and goals, someone could give a more useful recommendation. 
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2404 posts since 3 Mar, 2010
My main goal is to quickly generate and test different chord progressions for use in building new songs. I don't really play keyboard that well, so would like to simply audition different chords and progressions by pressing a few buttons, with the ability to change those chords and progressions easily to fit the sound in my head.
- KVRAF
- 5381 posts since 25 Jan, 2014 from The End of The World as We Knowit
A terrific Mac app called Suggester does just that:
http://www.mathieurouthier.com/suggester_osx/index.html
This one is free:
http://www.mucoder.net/en/tonespace/#demo
http://www.mathieurouthier.com/suggester_osx/index.html
This one is free:
http://www.mucoder.net/en/tonespace/#demo
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- KVRAF
- 2812 posts since 26 Jul, 2015 from Philadelphia
This is exactly my workflow when I start a track. I am getting a lot of milage out of Sundog Studio for that. It has a "Chord" window where you choose the scale and then have a button for each chord that works in that scale. You can just click around and check out what progressions works. I absolutely love that. When you are done you simply drag the midi into your DAW.
Sundog Studio is designed as a full prototyping tool where you can add melody and bassline to your chords but I really only use it to come up with an initial guess for a good chord progression. Once it is in the DAW I usually fine tune it, do an inversion here and there, maybe add a tension note, and the like. Almost everything I have done so far started that way.
Cognitone Synfire has similar functionality included but that's at the different price level and goes far beyond what Sundog Studio is designed to do in terms of prototyping.
I also have Scaler but I never really got comfortable with that. I don't have Captain Chords (although it is on my shopping list).
Sundog Studio is designed as a full prototyping tool where you can add melody and bassline to your chords but I really only use it to come up with an initial guess for a good chord progression. Once it is in the DAW I usually fine tune it, do an inversion here and there, maybe add a tension note, and the like. Almost everything I have done so far started that way.
Cognitone Synfire has similar functionality included but that's at the different price level and goes far beyond what Sundog Studio is designed to do in terms of prototyping.
I also have Scaler but I never really got comfortable with that. I don't have Captain Chords (although it is on my shopping list).
Follow me on Youtube for videos on spatial and immersive audio production.
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- KVRAF
- 2812 posts since 26 Jul, 2015 from Philadelphia
That is a nice one!Michael L wrote:A terrific Mac app called Suggester does just that:
http://www.mathieurouthier.com/suggester_osx/index.html
Follow me on Youtube for videos on spatial and immersive audio production.
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- KVRAF
- 2812 posts since 26 Jul, 2015 from Philadelphia
Played around with Suggester a bit, that is definitely a good one. I still think that Sundog Studio is the best option. For some reason the layout in Sundog lends itself more towards finding good progressions faster.
Never really liked Tonespace. But it is free.
Never really liked Tonespace. But it is free.
Follow me on Youtube for videos on spatial and immersive audio production.
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- KVRAF
- 5144 posts since 3 Oct, 2013
Push...
formulas are here: http://www.smithfowler.org/music/Chord_Formulas.htm , RapidCompose also very good
formulas are here: http://www.smithfowler.org/music/Chord_Formulas.htm , RapidCompose also very good
"Where we're workarounding, we don't NEED features." - powermat
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- KVRist
- 50 posts since 28 Mar, 2014
RapidComposer. It does everything the above programs do and much much more.
- KVRian
- 1186 posts since 21 Aug, 2017 from Brasil
Sundog is excellent, another option worth mention is
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- KVRAF
- 2140 posts since 16 Jan, 2013 from USA
I think if the goal is to get the sound out of your head, you need a blank slate such as an instrument, not something that might drive it out with its own choices. If you do use any of these, do yourself a favor and record the original thought by humming or whatever before you start.
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- KVRAF
- 3382 posts since 21 May, 2004 from Deep in the Heartlessness of Texas
I have Sundog 3 and the basic version of Rapid Composer and like them, though I haven't fooled around with them enough to really say that I've evaluated them. Attila, the dev for RC, is extremely responsive, and we had a fair amount of back and forth about him modifying the UI to make it resizeable for 4K use, and he implemented almost immediately and modified that as a result of our discussion. Big thumbs up for him as a dev!
I crossed off the Captain plugs because they insist on being connected to the net at all times as a copy protection mechanism. Total deal-breaker. Check their forum to see their justification and just how 'pleased' their customers are by this policy.
I crossed off the Captain plugs because they insist on being connected to the net at all times as a copy protection mechanism. Total deal-breaker. Check their forum to see their justification and just how 'pleased' their customers are by this policy.