Posted: Sun Nov 11, 2001 7:17 pm
Okay, mates, please no religious proclamations. I'm just looking for useful input here. Clearly these are both great programmes, each with own strengths as well as quirks and flaws.
I'm a VST/32 user, curious whether Logic might be better for me. Can't find a demo to download, and would like advice before I try.
I've heard it said that Cubase is suited for musicians who use computers and Logic is for computer people who do music. Suspect this is a bit simplistic and unfair, but may hint at an essential distinction between the 2. I consider myself a musician who is also very computer/software literate and LOGICAL. My biggest gripe with Cubase are that controlling it is often not intuitive to me, its interface design seems often ill-LOGICAL. Most common criticism I've heard of Logic is its learning curve, which doesn't worry me.
So, who among us who knows both can offer reasoned comparisons, to help me understand what are the real differences?
Of course, a lot depends on intended use. FWIW, Pulsar and STS sampler is the core around which I work. I do mainly composition and orchestration, using some synths (Pulsar and VTSi) but mainly samples of real instruments. I have NO outboard gear other than a kybd MIDI controller, a little analogue mixer for I/O monitoring, and a small tube pre and a couple of decent mics. Most projects start heavy with MIDI tracks driving samples, plus occasionally some audio, tracked in almost always 1-at-a-time (me only!!). Bouncing between Notation-MIDI is important to me, as is powerful, intuitive editing in variety of views/modes. At some point in a mature project I eventually render MIDI tracks to audio (and I hate wrestling with timing hassles here) and do some mixdown and amatuerish mastering-like work here. But to be clear, the main product for me is more the composition and eventually the charts (notation); the finished audio product is more of mockup. (This could change if I ever get to try selling stuff for film or whatever) - for now, this is mainly DIY amusement, and a composition tool to do charts for real bands and orchestras I play in.
So. Is Logic potentially a better tool for me?
Thanks for any advice.
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: dblbass on 2001-11-12 01:58 ]</font>
I'm a VST/32 user, curious whether Logic might be better for me. Can't find a demo to download, and would like advice before I try.
I've heard it said that Cubase is suited for musicians who use computers and Logic is for computer people who do music. Suspect this is a bit simplistic and unfair, but may hint at an essential distinction between the 2. I consider myself a musician who is also very computer/software literate and LOGICAL. My biggest gripe with Cubase are that controlling it is often not intuitive to me, its interface design seems often ill-LOGICAL. Most common criticism I've heard of Logic is its learning curve, which doesn't worry me.
So, who among us who knows both can offer reasoned comparisons, to help me understand what are the real differences?
Of course, a lot depends on intended use. FWIW, Pulsar and STS sampler is the core around which I work. I do mainly composition and orchestration, using some synths (Pulsar and VTSi) but mainly samples of real instruments. I have NO outboard gear other than a kybd MIDI controller, a little analogue mixer for I/O monitoring, and a small tube pre and a couple of decent mics. Most projects start heavy with MIDI tracks driving samples, plus occasionally some audio, tracked in almost always 1-at-a-time (me only!!). Bouncing between Notation-MIDI is important to me, as is powerful, intuitive editing in variety of views/modes. At some point in a mature project I eventually render MIDI tracks to audio (and I hate wrestling with timing hassles here) and do some mixdown and amatuerish mastering-like work here. But to be clear, the main product for me is more the composition and eventually the charts (notation); the finished audio product is more of mockup. (This could change if I ever get to try selling stuff for film or whatever) - for now, this is mainly DIY amusement, and a composition tool to do charts for real bands and orchestras I play in.
So. Is Logic potentially a better tool for me?
Thanks for any advice.
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: dblbass on 2001-11-12 01:58 ]</font>