Lamar Owen wrote: > > However, you hit the nail on the head when you say '...have appropriate > gain and other FX applied....' -- in my experience, determining the > appropriate FX levels and gains, etc, involves lots of test-mixes -- > which, at least, CEP will do a real-time monitor mixdown in multitrack > mode. Audio editing, as I am sure you are aware :-) is not a WYSIWYG or > even WYHIWYG enviroment, as what looks like something that will sound > good won't necessarily really sound good. And an edit/FX/adjustment on > one 'clip/region/block' might sound very good or even great when listened > to in single-track edit mode, and sound like junk in the context of the > mix.
I'm using Cakewalk SONAR and I like it very much. It can use CoolEdit as external wave editor for bigger editing stuff, but all eq, fx, etc. things are done either using edit list (non destructive) or in realtime. It can nicely combine single shot and loop samples, complete audio tracks, soft synths and and midi tracks. Same fx/eq/levels and envelopes can apply to wave and soft synth tracks on per-track, aux or output channel basis. And you can adjust all parameters in realtime when music is playing. Scrub tool is also nice (something like scratching with vinyl, just drag the cursor back and forth at different speeds and listen). I'm just waiting to see something similar for Linux, but I'm not very optimistic, because it's huge program and Cakewalk definitely has quite some experience on that field. Now I'm only missing Creamware Pulsar II... :) - Jussi Laako -- PGP key fingerprint: 161D 6FED 6A92 39E2 EB5B 39DD A4DE 63EB C216 1E4B Available at PGP keyservers
