Or is it more of a 'credibility' thing????
Inquiring minds..
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Scott Henderson wrote:...I am still eventually going MAC...
I've got Pro Tools, Cubase and Digital Performer too, but if you're going to get a Mac and are doing MIDI composing I highly recommend Logic. I've used it practically since its conception by eMagic, and it is about as full featured as can be, and very stable on the OSX platform, especially since its changed hands to Apple. Its also much less expensive now. You can transfer into Pro Tools if you want to bring it to a real studio for mixing etc, but you probably won't need to.Bill Terry wrote:...go ahead and move to a Mac and Logic and be done with it...
you are right. no matter what you think about ANY of these programs, if you ever want to work in a pro studio, you will have to have your files at least in a format that is compatible with pro tools. does not matter if you like the sound of it or the hardware and software. pro tools is the default setting in the recording world.John Macy wrote:I don't see Pro Tools going away as a professional standard for a really long time...about 95% of our outside biz come in on Pro Tools and the remaining bit on Logic....the question most asked by potential clients is "do you work in Pro Tools?"....what has been a big business booster for us lately is also having analog tape as an option...Presonus may make a killer product, but professionally I would be out of business in no time if I switched to it....
that was my point.. if you work in "commercial" facilities , you do need some form of PT, but if you, like me, work with mostly indie bands and do everything yourself(recording/mixing/mastering), you can call your own shots. we all know that the recording business is not what it once was , and now musicians want real choices, not being confined to this or that hardware or software. the DIY ethos has hurt PT's market share(and the big studio's profits)Bill Hatcher wrote:[
the Logic recording program for mac is a very good sounding program with lots of features.
Ditto... I did the exact same thing with a Teac A3440, and at the time it was pretty dang high tech. I found some old mixes off that Teac sync'd to MIDI rig the other day, and I'd forgotten how fat that thing sounded.To record real audio, I would stripe one track of a 4 track Tascam cassette tape with SMPTE code and sync the PC to run unlimited MIDI tracks. I'd then bounce the remaining 3 real audio tracks around if needed.