Yes but S1 doesn't force you to work in a linear way, which is my point. With Scratchpads and the Arranger track, you can work in a very pattern-based, non-linear way. The Arranger track, in particular, allows you to try all kinds of arrangement possibilities very quickly with minimal set-up. It saves you so many steps compared to working in the more traditional way. It does all your slicing and dicing and it automatically ripples the arrangement so you can move different length parts around without any hassle.antic604 wrote: Wed Dec 23, 2020 9:07 amIf you're working in a linear / traditional way, you need to come with at least rough apre-conceived idea for the arrangement & progression, capture it and polish a bit.
If you want to add randomness to your workflow, use patterns and the probability settings within them. It's a very cool thing.With clip launchers you actually let the arrangement & progression emerge from a collection of often random bits & pieces, by experimenting, using actual randomisation, generative tools.
But that's not what we are talking about. What we are talking about is why Studio One doesn't need a Session View and how to achieve similar results with existing tools within the application. As I said at the start, the workflow will be different but the tools are there to work in a non-linear way and they are both very usable and very powerful. You have to remember that for 30 years I worked exclusively with pattern-based workflows and I've only been using Studio One for a few months. It's not like I have anything at all invested in linear workflows and, even though I am still only scratching the surface of what S1 has to offer, I can already see many opportunities to work in a very non-linear way in Studio One if that's what you want to do.I understand that this way of working may not appeal to you and that's perfectly fine.
We are not there to please an audience and we would never, under any circumstances, modify what we do just to keep them happy. That's what art is, a take it or leave it proposition, and we very much consider ourselves artists, not entertainers.BONES wrote:Imagine you're playing your stuff live in front of audience. You observe their reaction. You see they don't like something - you skip it.
See, this here, is your problem. You think it is one thing or the other but it is not. Studio One is not strictly a linear sequencer, just as Live is not strictly non-linear. Each have tools for both workflows, it's just that Live has built its reputation on non-linear workflows, where Studio One has not.As I said, there are things you can do in clip launcher you simply can't do - on-the fly, organically and without audible glitches - on a linear timeline.
I'm sure the model who sat for Va Vinci when he painted the Mona Lisa was capable of many expressions but he knew which one to paint.All of this comes however from someone who just left clip launching DAWs (Bitwig, Live) because for me such workflow created an opportunity to never comit to anything and to never progress the tracks, because possibilities are endless so why would I choose just one?!
Go away and look up the word "inhabit".wuworld wrote: Thu Dec 24, 2020 12:09 amAs for the F tard. Can't call any youtubers that since you watch it as well. You should look at yourself first before calling anyone that.
Until two years ago I had been using a pattern based workflow for 36 years, since I bought my first (brand new) TB 303. Linear workflows are new and somewhat strange to me, a thing I need to learn how to live with. Studio One's non-linear tools have made that much easier, even though they are tools I have never seen or used before. So to suggest I am some how hidebound to a linear workflow is absolutely absurd.You only like what you started making 15 or 25 years ago.
I've been using Macros since they first introduced Actions into Photoshop, in Version 4, around 22 years ago. I also use them in Audition, where it makes sense because of the repetitive nature of many of the things you do in an image or audio editor. In an application like Studio One, they make much less sense.I recommend the macro tutorial, since you don't know how to use them.
S1 already has a lot of time-saving features and the things Gregor demonstrates in the macro video (which I watched months ago) are not things that slow you down or hold you back. Seriously, how much time is a copy/paste macro going to save you when the time-consuming part of that process is actually setting your cursor to the correct position? Macros are good for batch processing type things but I don't see how they are worth the effort for the kind of work you do in Studio One, things much better suited to hotkeys.