Which software you use to make audio recording

  • Thread starter Thread starter Gabriel Sousa
  • Start date Start date

Which software you use to make audio recording

  • Pro Tools

    Votes: 295 13.2%
  • Samplitude 24/96

    Votes: 68 3.0%
  • Cubase VST/32

    Votes: 436 19.5%
  • Nuendo

    Votes: 135 6.0%
  • Cakewalk Pro Audio

    Votes: 222 9.9%
  • Cool Edit Pro

    Votes: 411 18.4%
  • Vegas Audio

    Votes: 97 4.3%
  • n-track

    Votes: 151 6.8%
  • Sonar 1.0

    Votes: 226 10.1%
  • Logic audio

    Votes: 191 8.6%

  • Total voters
    2,232
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thane1200 said:
.........thats a good friend!
He's a pro musician. He gigs for the Navy band. We connected because of a mutual love for music. I wish he was around long enough to lay tracks with me. He can outsing most people I've heard. But he's always gone...
 
Gabriel Sousa said:
Which software you use to make audio recording ?

would like to know which is more used and the reason.

Thanks

Getting started on Cubase SE myself, loaded with features, user-friendly and wallet-friendly to boot!
 
QUOTE=Rokket]I have Sony Vegas 5.0

Many Samplitude users are also using Vegas for video editing and they select Samplitude from within Vegas for audio editing. I just got Samplitude vs 8 Pro and I ordered Vegas 5.

Chuck
 
cakewalk Pro and or sonar1 for midi recording,
Nuendo for editing, mixing
Emu 0404 sound card
 
sonar 2.0 for tracking & mixing
sooud forge 4.5 for minimal processing then cd burning
hopefully i'll get a higher version of sf so i could go 24/96
 
Adobe Audition 1.5. My wife gave it to me for Christmas, and it works. Better than the stuff I started on that crashed all the time.
 
On my main studio machine I use vintage versions of Cubase and Wavelab because they've been rock solid for me and I only record stereo files. (classical stuff).

On my laptop recording rig I use N-track and Wavelab.

I've tried demo versions of several others but for me the software is more a matter of ease of use, and many software possibilites work just as well. I get my best resuts when I focus more on the signal chain at the front end.

Tim
 
Kind of out of left field here...I've been using a few shareware and freeware tools on my Mac for several years...things you've probably never heard of but they work well for what they do.

Sound Sculptor--shareware audio editor with built in effects, 8 tracks maximum, but as far as I know no overdubbing/direct recording possible. It's pretty good for editing and assembling complex sound collages from pre-existing sound files, and can also do simple tone generation as well.

Coaster--freeware (I think) basic stereo recorder. I've been using this for mixdown from my portastudio lately.

Amadeus--shareware audio editor. Has VST plug-in support, and cool audio analysis tools (ie spectrograph, spectrum bar graph, etc) but won't let you tweak one channel independently of another, and is only stereo. Haven't used it much.

cheers

Billy S.
 
Logic audio. The digital summing rocks and I finally learned the damn thing so just that and sometimes ProTools
 
Dogman said:
Adobe Audition 1.5. My wife gave it to me for Christmas...

Did your wife have any idea what she was getting you into when she bought you the software? Does she regret it yet? :D
(Sometimes I think my wife thinks I'm crazy for my time investment into this word, never mind the money ....)
 
Cubase SX 2.
Used to use Cooledit. Fell in love with Cubase when I saw how much easier it made non-destructive editing (who woulda thunk it?).
 
Went Logic Pro 7 last week. Wow what a sequencer! I just love it. Don´t open the Logic package for the first time 5 days in front of a deadline though. I did. You will be banging your head against the wall for 3 days before up and running. But once up, nothing compares. :rolleyes:
 
Just got ahold of all the new Sony (Sonic Foundry) stuff. Using Sound Forge 8, Acid Pro 5.0, and CD Architect 5.2 - I'm still messing around with all the new features. I like the Sonic Foundry stuff, cause I usually record only 1 track at a time and it allows me to go in and be crazy with it. I am looking for something else to do the actual recording (the first part) and then use acid to arrange the tracks, and then sound forge to master, then cd architect to polish and do the final master. But I've yet to actually mess with it too much.
 
I didn't read all the postings, (too many posts and too little time), but I don't see Digital Performer as an option on the survey or as a comment on the first page of threads.

I'm a newbie, so feel free to flame away if I've missed something obvious, but where is DP? Am I the only one using DP? (Granted I'm still using DP3!)

Anyone?
 
MOTU said:
I'm a newbie, so feel free to flame away if I've missed something obvious, but where is DP? Am I the only one using DP? (Granted I'm still using DP3!)
Anyone?

Whats up MOTU, I'm a DP user as well. DP is the lost sequencer on this forum. Check out unicornation.com if your looking for lots of DP users who share the same trials and tribulations as yourself.
 
Tracktion

Anyone using Tracktion? I've been fiddling with it for a few days. I'm loving the interface.

LMAc
 
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