![]() ![]() If you think you'll ever need MIDI, then Audition probably isn't for you.Īs for the others, I have to say that Nuendo rarely comes up in a professional sound forum I visit-besides the dreaded ProTools, Logic and Cubase seem to come up the most-with a lot of people there saying good things about Reaper despite the low price. The downside, though, is that Audition has no MIDI or Rewire implementation and can't run VSTi's (VST plug ins fine though). I personally find the interface easy and intuitive-but I've been using it since it was Cool Edit 96 and a lot simpler. It's good for tracking and mixing, excellent for editing and excellent for restorative processing like noise reduction, getting rid of unwanted clicks, bumps etc. It's used in hundreds (or even thousands) of radio stations-the BBC alone have thousands of licences. Well, I'm a long-term Audition user so can give a few thoughts on that one.Īudition is a thoroughly professional piece of software but it's aimed more at the broadcast market than the "music maker" market. Any opinions on which program would be easiest to get down, or the most flexible, or the most capable? I'm assuming nuendo is the most advanced or professional, and also perhaps the most difficult to learn. So, I have reaper, audition, and nuendo on my computer, and just downloaded multi hundred page tutorials on each, but I'm looking for a little human opinion. But the whole "real time effect editing" thing is starting to become a lot more appealing to me, and of course audacity doesn't offer that. What I lack as anything other than a drummer, I can make up for, using cut and paste, and I find audacity so simple to use, with no loss of sound quality that I'm aware of. My stuff sounds very good for the equipment I use, very clean and tight. ![]() For a long time, I felt I hadn't reached the ceiling of what audacity had to offer. ![]() For guitar and bass, I play a strat style esp through a digitech whammy 2 and a zoom gx1 pedal, and into the audio in. I have the mics run through my old tascam 4 track as a mixer, and into the audio in on my computer. ![]() I record my drums with 2 overhead mxl mics (990's and 991's), and a nady dm90 (I know, not a great mic) in the kick. I have been using audacity, very happily I might add, since I discovered it in 2008. ![]()
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