I have used Logic since the early days.I have tried presonus studio one if you like drag and drop workflow then you would probably enjoy the workflow of studio one.I have Sonar X3 which has a devoted following but I have found it to be glitchy and it has various little bugs which irritate me I like the prochannel idea that it implements which is really like a popout mixer channel which you can add gates,compressers, and other fx. I also suggest watching some DAW videos for your specific use cases first, there's often some important info about workflow that you can't see from product specs or essential tricks you won't find in the manual. Logic would be my choice for mixing and finalizing a track, but in your case Pro Tools holds that position.įrom what you describe it sounds like you could do with Ableton, then Pro Tools. How important is the integration of external MIDI and Audio gear? How would you like to have them integrated?įor some reason, especially in the initial creative process, I use Ableton Live a lot more. Do you really need a linear track recording approach or could you become friends with pattern-oriented recording of ideas/snippets and spontaneous rearrangement? Do you have to exchange projects with other studios? What's missing in Pro Tools Windows that you rely upon in Logic Pro X? Reaper is very good too, but make sure you can be friends with its workflow.īut before suggesting any DAW, I'd like to start asking like this: (I'd even recommend Tracktion for its great workflow if there was some beefier development behind) Studio One, Ableton Live, Cubase, Pro Tools. The last thing I want to do is buy software I pretty much already have. I have done research, but I appreciate the communicative way to approach things. I do truly appreciate those that are on here. I looked, but either my search skills suck, or I just got too impatient with the monotony of sifting through stuff. I apologize in advanced if this exact question is on here somewhere. I am just looking for something easy on the system, superb work flow with virtual instruments, has a relatively small learning curve (as I would be using this in the studio with other engineers, so I will be teaching them as well), routing is simple, looks impressive to clients (don't judge me), and most importantly. So please, spare me that lecture, I understand. I also wouldn't recommend Pro Tools to someone who clearly doesn't really care about editing as a career and is just trying to record some basic ideas for fun. I would never recommend Logic X to a studio that needs to run 500 channels with an ass load of inserts (especially Waves plugins) for a post production project. Anyone have any experience with it? I seen it got a very heavy update and I am curious if it fixed all of the things wrong with it since launch.Īgain, I understand that people say a DAW is a personal thing. But with the new upgrades, it is looking appealing. I used to run Cubase 5 back in the day, but I have not worked with it since. I have finally upgraded to a far more powerful PC, and I didn't take into consideration that you can't run Logic on PC. Up until recently, I have used Mac for all of my work. Of course if it's game audio it would be the same, except I will either the use engine that the devs are using, or hopefully, Wwise or Fmod (if they are supported), instead of Pro Tools. When I do sound design for post production, I will almost always do the heavy editing in Audacity, bring it in to Logic to add a few layers of sweetness to it, then I ultimately bring it into Pro Tools where the rest of the session is. If I am working with an artist who is very heavy in the loop/sample based type of music, I will use Ableton. If I am working on some serious sound design, I use Audacity. All of my real sessions are done on a Pro Tools 11hd rig. If I am working with a band, artist, or just my stuff, I usually go to Logic to feel out chord progressions, different instrumentation, or some just some basic recording for rough ideas. I have found that Logic X is a fantastic tool for writing music because of the simplicity and work flow it provides. and not 'that guy' who has just used it at a friend's house. So I am interested in the opinion of those that have actually worked with it. I know that the people who post here are very experienced, and with that, most of you are very familiar with Logic. My question is this: What would the wise people of this forum suggest as an alternative to Logic X on Windows? I feel I should also note, I am not new to audio world. This is my first post here so I would like to start off by saying hello to all! This has been a go-to forum for me for awhile.
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