Members honeyiscool Posted March 5, 2013 Members Share Posted March 5, 2013 Here are some of the things I've bought and my quick thoughts on each:Apple Logic 9 + MainstageProbably the most essential programs I have. I use GarageBand a lot, too, and Logic can import GarageBand files, which is great. Mainstage is great for playing guitar through.Native Guitar Rig 5Well worth the money (esp since I got it for free w/ my Native Komplete interface), but I find myself using Apple's built-in amp modelers a lot more lately.Guitar Pro 6We're all busy people, right? So I occasionally write parts for my bandmates to play and I can tab them out quickly in Guitar Pro, then make a quick playthrough video, and then they can learn parts at their own leisure and you don't have to waste time in rehearsal. If you're a writer, I think this program is essential.iZotope StudioThis includes Alloy, Ozone, and Nectar. It's great for when I don't want to sit there and work out every effect I want to use on everything, I can have pretty powerful channel strips at my disposal.Melodyne EditorYeah, judge me all you want. This program is amazing. A little goes a long way, and it seems to work better than Autotune.XLN Addictive DrumsHaving tried other drum programs like BFD or DFH, this is my favorite. Also very affordable. The Ludwig kits are amazing. I will probably buy Addictive Keys soon. I have a drummer now but I still like to use Addictive Drums for demos, and I've also been pretty successful with sample replacement using Addictive. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Jerry_Lev Posted March 5, 2013 Members Share Posted March 5, 2013 I'm using Cubase 6 Elements as my DAW on an iMac. I have BFD for drum programming.I've been seriously contemplating Izotope Ozone 5, but now that you mention the Studio bundle, I'll have to think about whether I need Nectar and Alloy, too, before I make the purchase. Native Komplete is also on my shopping list.I don't need Guitar Pro yet, because I'm only interested in recording my originals, not performing them at this point. Although I'll admit I sometimes forget myself how I played something when I come back to it after a while. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members kit_strong Posted March 5, 2013 Members Share Posted March 5, 2013 Like you I also have Logic 9 (express) and Mainstage. I do still find myself using Garageband more often than not and probably could have done without Logic but Mainstage is defiitely money well spent. My best purchase to date has been Schuffham Amps S-gear. It's a fantastic amp modelling package and at only $75 is an absolute steal.In addition to those I also have Camel Audio's Phat and Space which are pretty cool plugin effects and Nomad Factories Magma virtual effects.Between those effects and S-gear I have more than enough tools to create any guitar sound/effect I could ever imagine.I also have a Native Instruments Maschine but don't use it nearly as much as I should. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members honeyiscool Posted March 6, 2013 Author Members Share Posted March 6, 2013 Jerry_Lev wrote: I've been seriously contemplating Izotope Ozone 5, but now that you mention the Studio bundle, I'll have to think about whether I need Nectar and Alloy, too, before I make the purchase. Nectar is a bit unnecessary but I think Alloy is excellent. I'd definitely miss it if I didn't have it. Izotope makes a Mix & Master bundle for Ozone and Alloy, and I think that'd be enough if I were doing it over. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members mistersully Posted March 7, 2013 Members Share Posted March 7, 2013 .....logic pro 8love it... i've been a logic user for a long time now... i know my way around the program, which makes a big differencehonestly though... DAWs these days are all great... it's when you really get into using aux channels and mixing in stems that they really shinemy mixes are a hybrid thing... everything goes back to be mixed through my midas venice f firewire mixerbfd2again, i think all the big drum programs today are good.. i'm happy i chose bfd though... love the raw samples... i do most of the editing in logic though, rather that bfd... i send each drum to it's own track, then the whole lot to a stereo aux channel... then i bus another aux from that and run parallel compression (either software or hardware t-racks 3i mainly use the single pieces in this now.. particularly the 1176 and la2a models... i have a hardware la2a but the plugin is still pretty cool... i sometimes use their fairchild plug for parallel compressioni used to run a mastering chain of t-racks after i finished a mix (or during a mix)... but i now use a hardware drawmer 1968 mkii compressor to mix into amplitube 3never use it ampeg svti usually put this on an aux of my di'd bass tone, just blended in a little... it adds some beef to the track and adds flexibility to shaping the tonefor bass i record through a samsamp bass driver di and the di of my UA solo610 (which has my hardware la2a on the insert for tracking).. the aux of the solo 610 goes to the ampeg software.. then all the tracks come back into 1 channel of my mixer, which sometimes has another hardware compressor on the insert for mixdown steven slate drumsvery rarely use them valhalla room and vintage reverbs$50 each and both cool usable reverbs... i'm really hanging for a great hardware reverb though... either a bricasti or tc4000 and a bunch of other plugins that i rarely use Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Bad Robot Posted March 11, 2013 Members Share Posted March 11, 2013 Logic Pro;Amplitube 3 (with metal & Hendrix);Melodyne;Addictive Drums;BFD2;T-RackS Deluxe;Scuffham Amps;Miroslav Philharmonik;Sonik Synth 2;Addictive Keys (just the grand); I think that pretty well sums it up. More toys than I ever thought I'd own. I tend to prefer ADD over BFD2 for various reasons, simplicity being the main one. I bought BFD2 for Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members genesis3 Posted March 11, 2013 Members Share Posted March 11, 2013 the Cakewalk SONAR line...I know it pretty well...still some cool things I haven't gotten to like MIDI split to track whereby you can split a MIDI drum track's individual drums to their own track for seperate processing. MIDI tracks are so much more flexible than audio loops,etc...DAW's are cool except for making drums sound good and authentic so I'm always working on that. Audio drum loops work fine for steady , repeating beats or very simple basic songs, but never seem to match what I want for transitions, fills, breakdowns, flourishes, tempo changes, variations etc,etc,etc Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members goodmooddrums Posted May 9, 2013 Members Share Posted May 9, 2013 I actually bought everything available on God's green earth, haha!For drums (in my kind of music; rock/pop/alternative and progrock) I recently started using:www.realdrums.nlReally great and really cheap..! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members ugameus Posted May 9, 2013 Members Share Posted May 9, 2013 I use MultiTrack by Harmonic Dog. It is a multi track app for the iPad. It is simple and works great for what I use it for. I have the Alesis IO Dock for the iPad. It has two mic inputs. It works flawlessly with MultiTrack and I can use the sound of my amp. No modeling for me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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