![]() ![]() There were lots of things about the interface in v1 era Logic I hated but it was just so fast. Nothing comes close to the speed of arranging in logic for me. I still miss those features in all the iOS DAWs. Having to go into a region to destructively apply quantising, velocity changes etc became such a pain I couldn’t go back to Vision or Performer. I could never get on with any other sequencer once I got used to those features. Want to transpose some regions, select them and drag the transpose value. From quantise to looping and transposing. It was hideous, but it had some specific features that made using it so fast and efficient and made it impossible for me to jump shipĮverything in the parameters is non-destructive. #CUBASE VS LOGIC FOR MAC#I’ve been using Logic since it was first released for Mac back in the early 90s. Studio One is like."nope, just get shit done"."Are you ready to do final mix and move over to mastering page, check your mix reference, and the LUFS for streaming?" I can easily lose a weekend just playing around with esoteric plugins and concepts. Some guys can start Ableton and get work done instantly, for me it's too vast. I think it's important to demo and figure out what tools you gel with so you know the goal (or lack of goal) for each session. Stuff that's fun to experiment with, but I just end up noodling, patching, and losing track of time with (VCV/Mirack, AUM, Reaktor, Bitwig, Ableton/M4L). DAWs I like to complete production, edit, and mix with (Cubasis on iPad, Studio One, ProTools).Ĭ. Quickly write with (hardware grooveboxes/workstations, Korg Gadget, Maschine),ī. Although there's often feature overlap, I think they all have different pros and cons in workflow.Ī. ![]()
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