> is it because the a4000 is such a bad sampler or are there others here
> that think of selling their (considered as being state-of-the-art) emu
> ultra sampler and switch to software? so what do u guys think? is a
> hardware sampler still needed for drum'n'bass production? what are the
> pros and cons of hardware samplers in comparison to software solutions?
> what makes you stick on to your hardware samplers?

alot of it may be personal preference to some, i suppose.. i was a software 
junkie for a long time until i got my e4 platinum. i'll tell you one thing, 
i have never seen any software filters that will ever compare. if there are 
any, i'd like to get my hands on them, heh.. 

the e4 platinum also comes with the rfx32 card which also makes it 
worthwhile.. and the beatmunger does make certain things easier... 

i run a small emu users group and we sit around and talk about production 
with emu samplers.. trading information back and forth, tips and tricks and 
whatnot..

personally, i prefer my sampler.. and i have used most of the software on 
the market.. i will tell you this though.. something that can come slightly 
close and is the choice of a miami based producer that is making rounds in 
the UK right now is using rewire and reason's sampler while hooking it up 
with cubase...

i am partial to my e-mu and logic audio platinum :)

-- 
michelle [severina]
frequencies live! w/ severina - powered by bassdrive - www.bassdrive.com
tuesdays 6-8PM EST / sundays 2-4PM EST



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