![]() |
![]()
Message
#1
|
|
![]() Newbie Groupe : Members Messages : 8 Inscrit : 04 août 04 Lieu : The Bronx - US Membre no 48,227 ![]() |
Hi -
I'm experienced with Mac's but not music software. I'm interested in learning by starting with a program to mix maybe a few midi and a few audio tracks. I've seen Logic Express for $140 student price and Cubase SE at Sam Ash for $100 Are there any real differences between these 2 products as far as what they DO?? Is it just a matter of differring special effects? (I'm most interested in pitch shifting audio due to my limitations of various kinds - ha) I get the idea that these programs are basically what used to be called 'sequencer programs' (a term that seems extinct for some reason - i had dabbled in Metro 4 a LITTLE years ago) I have a B&W Powermac with a G4/500 upgrade chip. And a Casio consumer MIDI keyboard and a USB interface i got a while back, in case thats a concideration for the software. In short - assuming my machine can run them (which I think it can) what do these programs (or their big brothers) actually do that are different from each other - interfaces etc aside. Thanks Landlox |
|
|
![]() |
Réponse(s)
![]()
Message
#2
|
|
![]() Newbie Groupe : Members Messages : 8 Inscrit : 04 août 04 Lieu : The Bronx - US Membre no 48,227 ![]() |
Thanks for both replies -
If it makes sense, now that you put it that way, that the Apple product would be likely to run better on my Mac. Thoug I am curious what kind of problems Cubase gave you? It also make sense to download a temporary Freebie at this point. So I appreciate the idea and will give it a shot. It may help me define my needs better. Thanks landlox |
|
|
Les messages de ce sujet







![]() ![]() |
1 utilisateur(s) sur ce sujet (1 invité(s) et 0 utilisateur(s) anonyme(s))
0 membre(s) :
