Concord Dawn apparently do most of their work in fruity. "Morning
Light" was a fruity loops track.
As
always, it's not the tool, it's how you use it.
As a
side note - I think this argument comes up again every other month.
Can we create a list of banned topics for these topics that keep coming up over
and over and have been beaten to death already?
trust
--------Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, November 27, 2002 5:34 PM
To: Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List
Subject: [dnb-prod] Re: programming beats ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
I use fruity loops. The interface makes it easy to audition drums, replace them, stack, edit, and otherwise tweak. The rift between "professional" gear and pattern-based stuff like Acid/Fruity is almost nill now- like a lot of other producers Im watching most of my hardware collect dust. Elitist gearhead snobs might call it a toy, but only until a big name producer busts out a track on it, which is going to happen eventually. Keep in mind alot of these guys just resent all the cheap new software that puts electronic music production within anyones grasp. Sorry to rant but I had words onlist with some guy who insisted I cant make anything decent with my piece of shit Zoom, even tho hes never heard my stuff. ---
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