Recording Software
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Re: Recording Software
Doesn't seem like it to me. BTW. Sonar is Cakewalk. That's probably why they looked so alike I'm sure we all have our own preferences. I've just grown accustomed to Sonar.
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Re: Recording Software
I agree that with any software, or any complex system, what you get used to first makes sense and anything else is odd, hard to use and so on. I use SONAR, I used Cakewalk in pre SONAR days, I've used Kristal and Cooledit Pro, and I have dinked around with Cubase. So far I like SONAR best, but that has a lot to do with what I do and how I do it. (My work is a mix of recording and Midi) Heck, I keep learning new things about SONAR every day. I figure it will take quite some time before I have all the features I use figured out completely.
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Re: Recording Software
yeah, I was joking around a bit, but I really do use Cubase SX3 most of the time, it's what I learned on and what I'm comfortable with. As far as transfering between sessions and platforms... last month we had to take 4 tracks to a studio in Orange, CA for a drum session. They of course have PTHD. We had to do a dirty mixdown and export everything as .wav files for the transfer from Cubase. We included a click track for sanity, lol. Everything imported fine, the drummer did about 5 takes on each track, we had to re-export as .wav files, and transferred 15 gigs of drum tracks back into Cubase here at home. Everything lined up, no problem. Just glad I brought that 300 gig external drive with me! So even if you can't import your eq settings and vst/efx etc, theres ways to get around it. I've only been doing this a couple years, I've been a musician all my life so the whole engineering gig is still new to me. But there's always a way if your creative, and the platform should be what your comfortable with and can be productive with... imho. Okay, I'll go back to being goofy now. I hate being all growed up, lol!
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Re: Recording Software
Quote:yeah, I was joking around a bit, but I really do use Cubase SX3 most of the time, it's what I learned on and what I'm comfortable with. As far as transfering between sessions and platforms... last month we had to take 4 tracks to a studio in Orange, CA for a drum session. They of course have PTHD. We had to do a dirty mixdown and export everything as .wav files for the transfer from Cubase. We included a click track for sanity, lol. Everything imported fine, the drummer did about 5 takes on each track, we had to re-export as .wav files, and transferred 15 gigs of drum tracks back into Cubase here at home. Everything lined up, no problem. Just glad I brought that 300 gig external drive with me! So even if you can't import your eq settings and vst/efx etc, theres ways to get around it. This is exactly the way to successfully transfer tracks back and forth to different platforms. Way to go.
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imagine if John Williams and Trent Reznor met at Bernard Hermann's for lunch and Brian Eno was the head chef!
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it's not the gear, it's the ear!
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