Thursday, July 11, 2019

Which DAW is best? - Logic, Pro Tools, Ableton or Cubase I

The two most prevalent sequencers were Steinberg's Cubase


The two most prevalent sequencers were Steinberg's Cubase and Emagic's Notator. from what I recollect, Notator resembled the occasion list in Logic and that was it. Cubase then again was significantly progressively natural enabling us to drag, drop, reorder squares of midi data. Later on Emagic changed the name from Notator to Notator Logic at that point at long last settled at Logic some time before Apple got them out obviously. I think before Notator, they were called Creator however how about we not go there! Discussing Apple, in those days Macs were very new on the music generation scene and Atari ST's were dependably thought of as increasingly steady, and they were shake strong planning astute. So in those days, Cubase was my sequencer of decision and I sped around on it like lightning as I was already aware it so well.


Towards the mid 902s Macs were sneaking in, they were better PCs, shockingly better than the Atari ST 1040 model, they had shading screens and it wasn't long until we had the capacity to record and alter sound to a certain extent. I recall once I was on a session with a maker called Ian Green at Metropolis Studios and two things stood out; the way that we were utilizing a rack of Akai S1000 samplers so high, they were taller than Ian – he isn't the tallest guy yet at the same time. Clearly the more samplers you have, the more yields to connect to the work area and all the more critically, back then, the more example time you had. I think we had parcels and bunches of support vocals and he needed to keep every one of the harmonies separate activated obviously from the Atari ST running Cubase. We were visiting about PCs with sound capacity and I surmise the main DAW. I'll generally recall that when we addressed sound capacity, Ian got some information about modules. I took a gander at him with a clear face since I had no clue what modules were!

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