Sundog Song Studio v PB Scaler 2
- KVRAF
- 2990 posts since 31 Jan, 2020
Sundog Song Studio v PB Scaler 2
Has anybody used both? Do you have any thoughts about this?
TBH i wasn't overwhelmed by Scaler 1. It helped me make some songs or "tracks" but not a lot.
Edit: ooh! I was using Reason. I'll have to try Scaler 1 with Bitwig. (thinking out loud)
Has anybody used both? Do you have any thoughts about this?
TBH i wasn't overwhelmed by Scaler 1. It helped me make some songs or "tracks" but not a lot.
Edit: ooh! I was using Reason. I'll have to try Scaler 1 with Bitwig. (thinking out loud)
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2990 posts since 31 Jan, 2020
"Go from calm, smooth, chill out styles to energetic upbeat tunes in a matter of seconds. Promised."
That's what Sundog Song Studio claims.
That's what Sundog Song Studio claims.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2990 posts since 31 Jan, 2020
I installed the Sundog demo, and my first impression is that it beats Scaler hands down! I hope this has been useful to somebody.
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- KVRer
- 13 posts since 22 Jul, 2006
I think of Scaler as more of a "music theory playground". I don't own Sundog, but I have spent some time with the demo, and it seems to be easier to use, and more focused on the quick construction of tracks (chords/melody/bass) rather than the "here's a bunch of scales and chords, do whatever you want" approach of Scaler. It also doesn't seem to have some of the more advanced theory features (modal interchange, suggestions for modulation routes, etc) that Scaler has.
That being said, I've just upgraded to Scaler 2 and they seem to want to take it towards being more of a full song construction tool with the addition of the rhythms and performance patterns, and all the new sounds. There's a of someone making a full track in Scaler 2, and it's pretty inspiring stuff. I'm really impressed with it so far.
That being said, I've just upgraded to Scaler 2 and they seem to want to take it towards being more of a full song construction tool with the addition of the rhythms and performance patterns, and all the new sounds. There's a of someone making a full track in Scaler 2, and it's pretty inspiring stuff. I'm really impressed with it so far.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2990 posts since 31 Jan, 2020
Great, thanks Bob 
- KVRAF
- 6210 posts since 25 Dec, 2004
i like Sundog Studio because it helps me to focus on the basic raw structure of my compositions. Just using the general MIDI sounds as a guide, to lay a solid foundation. It's a godsend. At first i didn't like the idea of a standalone program, instead of a plugin, but like i said - it removes all the trimmings and puts me into idea structure mode. Then with the barebones MIDI dragged into Cubase I have a few really focussed ideas to start, which generally leads to far more musical results, for someone like me with no musical training.
I'll probably buy Scalar 2 also though. I really love this new generation of MIDI tools... ChordPotion, Phrasebox, Playbeat etc
I'll probably buy Scalar 2 also though. I really love this new generation of MIDI tools... ChordPotion, Phrasebox, Playbeat etc
sketches... http://soundcloud.com/onesnzeros
some artists i support... https://bandcamp.com/spectraselecta
some artists i support... https://bandcamp.com/spectraselecta
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- KVRer
- 20 posts since 29 Apr, 2017
Have Scaler 1 & 2, used Sundog Scale Studio for years. SSS by far is easier to use and get good results out of. You can see all of the chord variations at once instead of having to click a million different voicing patterns like Scaler.