DP is horribly awkward in parts, it's one of the oldest DAWs out there. Clips are at this point still tacked on, they still don't feel 100% integrated. It still treats instruments and MIDI as separate tracks, track selection is really powerful but really complicated to get your head around. The "Arrangement Page" is split into two windows, it finally got some love from intelligent MIDI controllers, but nothing like what Bitwig and Live can do.antic604 wrote: Sat Jan 29, 2022 10:32 am
Great post, all of it. You know me too well!![]()
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Anyway, regarding that particular bit I quoted - the problem with Ableton is that it's very hard to work in it after you've 'tasted' Bitwig. It just feel very constrained and rigid, for some reason: audio editing workflow is terrible, clip launcher feels like a separate part of the DAW, there's no mixer to speak of, LFO/Shapes/Envelope steal your device controls, browser is very inefficient (other than for searching samples - this is leagues better in Live!), they have some brilliant devices but using Racks is a chore compared to Layers, Selectors and Splitters, and so on... And its CPU use is ridiculous.
With Reason it's easier - I'm keeping it even if it won't be my main. I've sunk too much money in 3rd party REs and even if I'd never upgraded my 11 Suite it's got more than enough sounds and devices for a lifetime![]()
I still get more complex arrangements in it than I do in Bitwig and Live, which is in the end of the day all that matters. I jumped around a lot because I get bored and I end up getting overly annoyed at a perceived limitation in DP etc. This is the biggest thing, you talk the most about loving Reason, and getting work done in Live, so the choice is between those two.
I'm sticking with DP and Live, but it's not easy, mostly because I almost think of them the way I think of soft synths. I've always jumped between the "fun DAWs" and DP or Logic so it's nothing new. I don't think they have the best UX, that would be Bitwig and Logic, but DP and Live have features I want, that make me more productive, that I want to use in my music. It's all a compromise, so at some point you have to accept the limitations of the DAW you choose.
[In the bigger picture it's the opposite problem, nearly every DAW has something about it that's best of class, and if you jump around you are acutely aware of this, making choosing one that much harder.]