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Post by Johnkenn on Feb 9, 2024 18:28:51 GMT -6
Watching my new favorite Scotsman...this is one of the most convincing arguments for ditching PT I've heard. Of course, I only have a junior version of Studio One...but could upgrade. I do think Cubase basically does all of these things too. Not sure about the cool splitter tool, though.
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Post by Tbone81 on Feb 9, 2024 18:45:07 GMT -6
I almost jumped ship to Studio One from Cubase. Cubase is a little more mature when it comes to mixing, but studio one is a little better with midi and song writing tools IME.
Both are great, if the routing was a little more similar to Cubase (especially the control room feature) I would have switched.
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Post by Johnkenn on Feb 9, 2024 19:29:46 GMT -6
I almost jumped ship to Studio One from Cubase. Cubase is a little more mature when it comes to mixing, but studio one is a little better with midi and song writing tools IME. Both are great, if the routing was a little more similar to Cubase (especially the control room feature) I would have switched. I ree er ally need to watch some more vids about Cubase. That’s what I started in, so I’m very familiar with it. But stuff like control room, macros, etc…I just don’t know much about.
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Post by gravesnumber9 on Feb 9, 2024 19:35:27 GMT -6
I don't know how control room works in Cubase but Studio One does have what I believe is a similar feature. It also has really easy to use macros.
I'm back on Studio One after a brief dance with Reaper. I like reaper but just a little too much thinking for me. I can never get to the point where I wasn't aware of the tool.
But Reaper and Studio One both have the distinction of being the only two systems that I've personally used where I can easily set up my hybrid routing approach and very easily route things the way I want to instead of the way the software designers want me to.
And then Logic. Which like every other Apple product makes me do things the way it wants to
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