By Explicit-
Thu Apr 22, 2010 7:00 pm
MGStudios wrote:Is that what you got explicit?
yes thats what I got.
Dont buy PT8 by itself cuz it doesnt work without a Digi interface. So you might aswell buy it bundled.
MGStudios wrote:Is that what you got explicit?
emptysea wrote:There's no good reason Pro Tools was considered an "industry standard" other than that it was a closed system where it forced its customers to buy expensive proprietary hardware and overpriced plugins back when there were far less choices and competition around, and a lot of people started falling into the trap. It's no longer as much of an "industry standard" though, thankfully. I can't wait for it to die, to be honest.
boxcutter butta wrote:Why the eff are you asking if your already set on pro toolsdear mgstudios,why don't you check out the newbie threads before you ask a question,because a lot of questions you ask,have already been answered. there is no such thing as a HIPHOP daw or a best DAW for hiphop. do a little searching around these threads you'll find plenty answers.once you do get a DAW you'll want to know how to track,sync,so on and so on.those answer are at your finger tips.
GTFO
Explicit- wrote:I would work on the craft a little longer though... Say a few more months because once you get a DAW your going to be so focused on recording and learning PT that your interest in crafting your beats will lose out.
I think waiting a bit longer will only make you better. Just some advice... I myself should of done this but didnt.
So learn from my mistake.
MGStudios wrote:Explicit- wrote:I would work on the craft a little longer though... Say a few more months because once you get a DAW your going to be so focused on recording and learning PT that your interest in crafting your beats will lose out.
I think waiting a bit longer will only make you better. Just some advice... I myself should of done this but didnt.
So learn from my mistake.
Oh so you just suggest I chill for a little while and learn my MPC then buy/learn my DAW?
akmatic wrote:there's just no denying that protools is the industry standard. If you want to be taking your projects to other studios for mixing or whatever this is the best way to go about it.
akmatic wrote: Ableton is great for warping stuff and putting together beats but when it comes to tracking it blows.
MGStudios wrote:akmatic wrote: Ableton is great for warping stuff and putting together beats but when it comes to tracking it blows.
Why is this?
EDIT: also I see no demo version of PT8 so idk how I'm supposed to judge it
MGStudios wrote:akmatic wrote: Ableton is great for warping stuff and putting together beats but when it comes to tracking it blows.
Why is this?
EDIT: also I see no demo version of PT8 so idk how I'm supposed to judge it
josephnicks wrote:MGStudios wrote:akmatic wrote: Ableton is great for warping stuff and putting together beats but when it comes to tracking it blows.
Why is this?
EDIT: also I see no demo version of PT8 so idk how I'm supposed to judge it
there is no DEMO version of Pro Tools.. you either have the hardware to run it or you dont.. im guessing you lack the hardware...
you have a long long long way to go, i dont think you should have ever bought an mpc, you should have just downloaded a cracked version of Fruity Loops and learned from there and seen if producing is really for you.. I started off on reason years ago it taught me a lot about producing and how things work and routing.. i still use reason now as a sound mod with the mpc and track into reaper.. before i had the mpc i was using Reaper as my sequencer for Reason, choppin up samples in Recycle and cuttin ish up with Dr.Rex... Routing every sound in reason to its own channel in reaper so i could add vsts and what not.. im almost scared for you to attempt to learn the routing process... just saying..