
famous beagle
Well-known member
I have never tried Waves Tune, and do not know how it works. I may need to try a demo to see.
This statement right here is one of the other perils of the digital recording world, IMHO. There are so many ways to easily distract yourself from actually making music. And let me preface this by saying I'm in no way singling you out jimmy. This applies to everyone, including myself.
You said it yourself earlier in the thread ... you're proficient with Melodyne and most people would be surprised at what it's really capable of. This, to me, implies that you're very happy with it. The same could be said for many others with different pieces of software. Yet we still feel the need to try a demo of a competitor just because someone else mentions it with a favorable review. And why not? It's so easy nowadays. Download the demo in a few minutes, and you're up and running.
The problem is that it's taking the focus off of making music. It's putting the focus on getting more and more gear instead of using what we have (which is already 100% capable of achieving the results) to record some good music. Of course, people can try out different pieces of hardware as well, but it's much more difficult to do that (unless you're just made of money) and therefore isn't a chronic issue like it is with software.
This extends far beyond the world of audio recording as well. I mean .... think about a program like Workflowy. It's a frickin' to-do list! That's pretty much it. We really need a program like this?
It's this constant upgrade mentality----more more more, newer, newer----that drives me nuts. Most people never even bother to use 10% of an item's potential because they upgrade to a new model (phone, computer, tablet, etc.) before they even have a chance. And of course it perpetuates itself: computers get faster, so designers make use of that extra power to write more powerful programs. Then the computers need to outgrow the programs, and then the programs catch up, etc., ad infinitum. And I know that's basically how technology works.
But for someone like me that places value on using something thoroughly to its full potential, it's kind of depressing to see so many things being built with the intent of being thrown out a few years later.