S
spackler
New member
I've been looking around and can't seem to find a recent thread covering this sort of ground, so if there's one I missed -- sorry for the clutter. If not...
I'm looking to purchase new software for a new Windows 7 Machine. In the past I've used Sony Vegas' product, which is now a good 7 years old. I've not used it for a while, and never really mastered any of its higher level functionality, so I'm prepared to rebuild with whatever software makes the most sense. So, I'm pretty much trying to build a good pros and cons checklist among the primary vendors... I'm looking at
I'm not looking at
But figure it's helpful to include them for those maybe considering. I guess I'm looking for opinions on these options as to pros and cons. I'll explain what I'm doing to provide guidance / context for those opinions. Hopefully future folks kicking around the same question will read the thread, gather what they need, and then post a few things about their own situations if they don't feel the thread so far gives them enough information.
Style / Artistry I do guitar (electric guitar and bass and acoustic guitar), keys, cajon and basic percussion, and vox. Music I want to record is everything from basic acoustic / vox harmony tunes, to full-out rock. Music influences that are expressed in my own writing / ideas are varied, everything from bluegrass, Richard Thompson, Grateful Dead, to Ween, Radiohead, to Broken Social Scene, to The Strokes... Super Fury Animals... the Talking Heads. Being a bit old school, I used to scoff at overt tech/software-produced instrumentation/sounds (meaning, Reason-like functionality was meaningless to me, I'm now very open to pushing into that area, although I'm a complete newb in that respect. I'm totally re-listening to Fat Boy Slim recently, and can't believe I totally blew it off at one point... At the same time I'm totally digging Hiromi.
Bottom line, I want the flexibility to push in a variety of directions and don't to bang my head into too many systems based ceilings apart from those that go along with lack of knowledge, although from what I'm reading these days, that's getting really hard to do.
Experience -- I've only used recording software in the most rudimentary fashion -- 10-12 tracks at most, vox, guitar, base, very basic hand drums, then modified by adding simple compression and reverbs/delays. Old setup was never taken too seriously since I was more into the rawness of it all, and always expected that "someday" I'd get more serious about building a proper setup.
Equipment accumulated that I will use /or may or may not need given what I'm reading...
Objectives
I am, right now, wanting to flesh out ideas and produce my music mostly as a multi-instrumentalist / solo artist. I want a professional end product for the end-consumer and for building interest among collaborating artists.
In that, smaller objectives include:
So, those goals I recognize mean I have a lot of learning to do, which I'm ready to embark upon... My concern / the purpose of creating this thread is that since I'm starting over system-wise, I don't want to find I've gone down the wrong path and regret having sunk the money and mental capital into the wrong system / learning curve. I don't want to blow cash. This is my push to really do this right vs. half-assed, but with limited time with a non-music full time job, I don't want to screw around doing it wrong. Part of me understands that the only way to really know in the end is to immerse yourself into it and just get your feet wet from experience. But everyone also knows its best to measure twice, cut once...
That said, my current thinking is in order of pecking order is first to go with Propellerhead Record & Reason combo --
Pros --
Cons (with my rationalizations...)
Number 2 is Sonar X1
Pros
Cons
Cubase 6
Many of the same pros (64 bit rewrite) and cons as Sonar X1, but not as easy to use for artists. Visually still somewhat complex / not as intuitive.
ProTools 9
While it remains the Pro Studio industry standard, and is great if you're expecting to share files among ProTools users, cons include:
Apple Logic
No Windows, so I've nothing to say... but included since many apple users may have questions as thread develops.
**
So, with all that thrown out there, I totally appreciate any and all insight other forum contributors are able to throw out there for those of us currently in my situation.
Many, many, many thanks in advance!!!
-- Spackler
I'm looking to purchase new software for a new Windows 7 Machine. In the past I've used Sony Vegas' product, which is now a good 7 years old. I've not used it for a while, and never really mastered any of its higher level functionality, so I'm prepared to rebuild with whatever software makes the most sense. So, I'm pretty much trying to build a good pros and cons checklist among the primary vendors... I'm looking at
- Cakewalk Sonar X1
- Cubase 6
- Propellerhead Record
I'm not looking at
- ProTools
- Apple's Logic
But figure it's helpful to include them for those maybe considering. I guess I'm looking for opinions on these options as to pros and cons. I'll explain what I'm doing to provide guidance / context for those opinions. Hopefully future folks kicking around the same question will read the thread, gather what they need, and then post a few things about their own situations if they don't feel the thread so far gives them enough information.
Style / Artistry I do guitar (electric guitar and bass and acoustic guitar), keys, cajon and basic percussion, and vox. Music I want to record is everything from basic acoustic / vox harmony tunes, to full-out rock. Music influences that are expressed in my own writing / ideas are varied, everything from bluegrass, Richard Thompson, Grateful Dead, to Ween, Radiohead, to Broken Social Scene, to The Strokes... Super Fury Animals... the Talking Heads. Being a bit old school, I used to scoff at overt tech/software-produced instrumentation/sounds (meaning, Reason-like functionality was meaningless to me, I'm now very open to pushing into that area, although I'm a complete newb in that respect. I'm totally re-listening to Fat Boy Slim recently, and can't believe I totally blew it off at one point... At the same time I'm totally digging Hiromi.
Bottom line, I want the flexibility to push in a variety of directions and don't to bang my head into too many systems based ceilings apart from those that go along with lack of knowledge, although from what I'm reading these days, that's getting really hard to do.
Experience -- I've only used recording software in the most rudimentary fashion -- 10-12 tracks at most, vox, guitar, base, very basic hand drums, then modified by adding simple compression and reverbs/delays. Old setup was never taken too seriously since I was more into the rawness of it all, and always expected that "someday" I'd get more serious about building a proper setup.
Equipment accumulated that I will use /or may or may not need given what I'm reading...
- Brand new custom build Win 7 PC with mucho processor/ RAM headroom
- M-Audio Firewire 410 which runs two channels in + Midi
- Two Mackie 1202-VLZ Pro 12 Channel Mixers
- Yamaha MM8 Keyboard
- MXL Condensor Mic
- Pod XT
- ART Studio VS Tube MP Preramp
Objectives
I am, right now, wanting to flesh out ideas and produce my music mostly as a multi-instrumentalist / solo artist. I want a professional end product for the end-consumer and for building interest among collaborating artists.
In that, smaller objectives include:
- Better Drums -- In the past I've been drum deficient, and I want to have the capacity to build in convincing drum work into my self-produced materials.
- Ability to construct loops / digi music
- More professional sound
- MIDI integration -- never used it before.
So, those goals I recognize mean I have a lot of learning to do, which I'm ready to embark upon... My concern / the purpose of creating this thread is that since I'm starting over system-wise, I don't want to find I've gone down the wrong path and regret having sunk the money and mental capital into the wrong system / learning curve. I don't want to blow cash. This is my push to really do this right vs. half-assed, but with limited time with a non-music full time job, I don't want to screw around doing it wrong. Part of me understands that the only way to really know in the end is to immerse yourself into it and just get your feet wet from experience. But everyone also knows its best to measure twice, cut once...
That said, my current thinking is in order of pecking order is first to go with Propellerhead Record & Reason combo --
Pros --
- This package seems to combine most of the tools I want to have in one package.
- What I hear (mostly through their PR) is that it's a system for musicians and not producers, meaning it's more musician / artist intuitive, and less Ph.D. Producer focused.
- Record's easy integration with Reason seems a natural for some of the areas I want to grow.
Cons (with my rationalizations...)
- Record is fairly new, so I'm a bit concerned about how developed it is vs its peers. No doubt, Propellerhead is an experienced company, but a new platform is a new platform.
- I can't help but think it will have limits in the production side -- but given my level of experience, those won't be hit for a while, and moreover, I can't imagine the software won't grow over time to be more on par with the peers.
- I've heard (need confirmed) that Propellerhead isn't as open as other systems to third-party apps / plugin... (although, doesn't Reason/Record covers most ground anyway?)
- No 64-Bit software version... Kinda surprising given it's 2011, but I appreciate they want to 32bit backwards compatibility for existing users efficiency... Their are tons of 32-bit Reason users who are excited by this, and that they probably want critical mass before sinking the cash into the 64 bit core. But starting from scratch, the idea of 64-bit from the ground up weighs in vs. converting 2 years down the road and having the older version crudging up system resources since you can never seem to fully remove old software.
Number 2 is Sonar X1
Pros
- Seems to have more production headroom / background
- 64 bit
- Embraced by industry
- Both native and 3rd-party plugin convenience for covering ground similar to reason, and with more versatility maybe?
- total rewrite -- interface geared to more visual simplicity for artists vs. expert producers
Cons
- complexity / too production expertise focused??
Cubase 6
Many of the same pros (64 bit rewrite) and cons as Sonar X1, but not as easy to use for artists. Visually still somewhat complex / not as intuitive.
ProTools 9
While it remains the Pro Studio industry standard, and is great if you're expecting to share files among ProTools users, cons include:
- More expensive vs. competition when considering feature and benefits.
- Visual interface dramatically lagging peers above convenience wise / less intuitive
- Much harder to learn than the peers above
Apple Logic
No Windows, so I've nothing to say... but included since many apple users may have questions as thread develops.
**
So, with all that thrown out there, I totally appreciate any and all insight other forum contributors are able to throw out there for those of us currently in my situation.
Many, many, many thanks in advance!!!
-- Spackler