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Hilary
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PostPosted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 7:15 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

So I'm still looking for musician-friendly recording software.

I had started out with Audacity, and it works like a dream but it can only output 2-channel stereo and it crashes a lot. And it has a long list of rotten effects that I don't know how to delete.

I had looked at n-track but that's looking pretty dead nowadays.

I had looked at -- and tried -- Reaper but I was uncomfortable with the general loser vibe and obscenities; and the sarcastic references to Jesus really hurt me. Who needs -that- $#!%?

I went out and purchased the new Cubase Essentials 4, thinking that the large Cubase user base is a good recommendation, but it is NOT a recording program. A MIDI production/creation tool maybe, a toy for someone who likes to play with his computer, but it's not for musicians recording music.

In Audacity, if I want to record a track, I hit the red button and it starts recording. This morning, I went to do a three-track recording, and every time I wanted to do it, it required 30 CLICKS, give or take a few depending on how you want the monitoring to be set up.

30 CLICKS TO RECORD A TRACK.

And it won't go to 32-bit (for clean effects and undistorted volume line math). And it has a peculiar style of blacking out the area between the wave and the wave centerline, so you can't really see what you're recording unless you zoom to nanoseconds, in which case you can't see either.

It might be a great MIDI assembler but it isn't a music recording tool.

Is -anything- a good musician's recording tool? I mean, if Audacity is just a couple output busses and a little more polishing to be a perfect product -- a tape machine without the tape -- and it's free, why can't I find something at least that good, with four or six outputs, for a hundred bucks or two?

H
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bent
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PostPosted: Sat Apr 26, 2008 8:51 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Mo money, mo money, mo money...

I've said it a million times: Vegas. The DAW, not the town.

I've taught countless musicians how to use it at RC....

[/repeating myself]

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Space
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 27, 2008 9:21 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Tracktion recording software may be what would interest you. Reads like the gui{graphical user interface} is giving you the most issues, and Tracktion has a very simple gui.
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dterry
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 27, 2008 9:29 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Cubase actually is a great recording app - esp. Cubase 4. I don't know what is or isn't in Cubase Essentials, but there is a ton under the hood of Cubase 4. You can simply setup your template (or default project) for whatever and however many tracks you need, with inputs assigned, output bussing, grouping, etc, etc and be off an running in seconds.

I have separate templates in Nuendo for scoring, audio post projects, voiceovers, etc, with key commands and workspaces for recalling screen setups.

I wouldn't necessarily say Vegas is a great music production app. It's a great NLE, but audio/music capabilities are behind other DAWs, and while it's simple in some regards, it's not a program to grow with in terms of music production (truly great for video though - probably faster than Final Cut).

I agree with you on the apps you've tried - most freeware/shareware apps leave quite a bit to be desired at least in some key area, even for simpler use.

As far as inexpensive alternative recording apps - Samplitude SE might be another to consider. It's fairly straightforward for most recording needs.
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hueseph
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 27, 2008 6:35 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

No matter what software you get, you'll need to get intimate with your manual. Yes! Your manual. Every piece of software has some sort of getting started tutorial. Seriously. If Cubase Essentials is a roadblock for you, I don't know what will be of any value to you. If you can't get the basics of routing together, no amount of money is going to get you into recording any easier.

There is always some amount of setup involved before you start recording. Choosing the driver, enabling inputs and outputs, selecting your target recording drive, setting up folders for each project. There's always some configuring to do. If you get frustrated at that point, how do you expect to move forward? It might seem overwhelming now but if you can just get past it, those things will be the simple things that you will apply no matter what DAW you use.

Sony's Acid actually has a tutorial built in to it. You can find it in a drop down menu and it will literally hold your hand through the whole recording process. But then there's some more money for you to spend.

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mwacoustic
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PostPosted: Sun Apr 27, 2008 7:04 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

30 clicks to record a track?

As Dterry said, if you set up a template or two ahead of time, when the moment strikes you can save a lot of time. It's pretty darn close to "hit the red button and go" from there...

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IIRs
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PostPosted: Mon Apr 28, 2008 1:41 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Hilary wrote:
the sarcastic references to Jesus really hurt me. Who needs -that- $#!%?


Laughing

I just found my first good reason to check out Reaper.

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ElPedro
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PostPosted: Mon Apr 28, 2008 6:23 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

bent wrote:
Mo money, mo money, mo money...

I've said it a million times: Vegas. The DAW, not the town.

I've taught countless musicians how to use it at RC....

[/repeating myself]


I absolutely have to agree as someone who coaches non-professionals to self-produce podcasts. We use audacity to get them started, but when they want to take it up a notch, we head to Vegas land (except for the Mac users, who play with Garage Band).
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BrianaW
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PostPosted: Mon Apr 28, 2008 7:02 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Guitar Tracks Pro by Cakewalk is totally musician friendly. It's modeled after analog recorders and mixers. Just a thought. I've used it, and still do for some things due to it's simplicity. It runs quite smoothly as well.
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IIRs
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 1:48 am Reply with quoteBack to top

+1 for Tracktion. Though unfortunately it doesn't contain any blasphemy...
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Hilary
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:01 am Reply with quoteBack to top

"No matter what software you get, you'll need to get intimate with your manual. Yes! Your manual."

Yep, that 30 clicks was clocked with the manual on my lap and my finger on the page, doing just what it said to do, step by step. As a matter of fact, I didn't even do everything it said to do; if I had named the track it would have been more.

I'm pretty accustomed to writing macros in Windows office apps and I suppose that templates are the same thing but why should people lie down and put up with user-hostile software anyway?

If you want to be a recording "engineer" the more knobs and switches you have the better. If you want to be a musician, at least if you want to be a good one, you're pursuing something that's evasive at best, and the best environment is the least distracting one.

It's probably inevitable that the people who write apps, being computer jocks, are going to write apps for computer jocks.
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Hilary
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 2:11 am Reply with quoteBack to top

"I've said it a million times: Vegas."

Oh, and by the way, I have Sound Forge/ CD Architect.

CD Architect is exactly like a Seventies American car: Beautiful and powerful and comfortable and nothing on it works right. (Struggle with pc and burner compatibilities, unacceptable distortion apparently due to sloppy math)

If it is an example of Sony's craftsmanship, Vegas being so much bigger is bound to be so much more a nightmare, isn't it?

Gee, I hate to be so negative here....what I want is so simple....
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cathode_ray
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 6:44 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Musicians can be very un-friendly...

But CUBASE SE-3 is VERY affordable and easy(if you can read) and will do everything you need(from the sound of your past endevours).
Once you have a template and use it to start a new song, one button works.
I think TRACTION will as well...
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hueseph
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 8:33 am Reply with quoteBack to top

I will bet that 20 of those thirty clicks were a one time thing. I use Cubase and once I have a project set up, there's only two clicks to record. One to enable the track and the second one to click record. That's it. I don't know where your thirty clicks are coming from.

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Codemonkey
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PostPosted: Tue Apr 29, 2008 11:22 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Kristal

Pros:
Free.
Easy (5 clicks TOPS for recording a stereo track from a brand new project).
16 channel multitracking.
Supports VSTs.
Has basic fade in/out / master gain.

Cons:
Multi Window interface.
No envelopes (of any sort).
Only 2 VSTs per track + 3 masters (unless you download a VST which allows chaining of VSTs inside it)

Haven't played about with the simultaneous input/output of it but I know that it plays back the mix of any tracks there when you record. Yes, it has a mixer. If I got the source, rewrote the UI and added volume envelopes/FX automation, I'd love it.

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