by sampleandhold » Fri Jun 13, 2003 8:34 am
actualy, my uncle built my pc, and so it works great. working in audio in cakewalk is fine, but i also find that i can do the same with my sampler. and what i mean by that is this:
as for plug in's, i haven't really heard plug in's, or even the rfx board to really know what sounds better. the reason why i don't have the rfx, is because when i got there little thing in the mail about a year or two ago, i had the impression it wasn't for my sampler. so i really never looked into it. also being it the price of a new sampler really makes it hard to think about getting one. thus the price cut.
most of my experiance with software comes from pro audio 8, and at the time, three years ago? i don't remember, i really didn't know about all these other programs, and for all i know they may not have even existed. i know that with some of the effects i have in pro audio, like the flanges, can sound good, if in mono, but you do stereo, for some reason, they clip... and i also discovered that i couldn't get real time control over the effects, or at least i couldn't figure it out and i could only timestretch vocals, sometimes, every once in awhile. if i even slightly timestretch a drum sample it sounded weird. a trend that has carried on to sonar. that is why i went the sampler route, i wanted something with control and something that would speed things up, something that i knew everything would work, and work right. working in audio is very slow, atleast with cakewalk, i have to chop up my samples every time i want to add or subtract an event, then i have to place it and do it again. i find just everything triggering from my sampler is much faster and not as taxing on harddrive space. but i will say that recording everthing over to audio does improve the sound greatly. and with plug ins and other software stuff like that coming out now, they have improved alot over what i could get three or four years ago. and if i need to i might go for a software effects package in the end, since it is cheaper. and might sound just as good if not better then an 800 dollar board for our samplers. but i am happy with my emu right now as it is.
like i said before, i think a sound editor would be great on the software side, that would interface with the emu. but it would have to have stuff that i can't do on my emu, or it would be just a reduntant system... the akia system sound cool, but does it work with emu? from what you say it sounds like you can make your edits without transfering samples back and forth, and if i understand that right, then that would be something that i would more likely go for. but i find that i am gravitating more over to hardware every day. i am seriously considering getting a hardware paramtric eq, and graphic eq, so i can play the song through them and actually hear what is going on in the sound, in real time. i know there is software that will do this, but i don't know of any that can work with cakewalk, and since my computer is old i don't want to take the time to have to convert 70 or 80 megs over to a different format just to use a real time parametric eq. maybe i should look into more software stuff that can work with cakewalk, i don't know...
as for my computer; it works good, but i understand that the more complicated a system is the more like it is to have something wrong, or go wrong with it. that is why my computer only has cakewalk on it, nothing else, no games no internet, nothing. why, because when you load another program into your computer, they can sometimes cause problems, because maybe the set up for your sound card isn't right for your new program so in order for it to work right, it has to change that property, and then your old program doesn't work, or doesn't work as well because the new program fucked it up. that i what i am talking about. i have actually had that happen to my computer and i had to fdisc it just to get things back, because of course the program i added inbedded it's self in other files that i couldn't get rid of. the whole software side is kind of a gamble, they are trying to make something that will work in an unknown. my computer is different from your computer and yours is different from your friends and so on. so a program that will work for you may not work for mine, but will work better for your friends. that happens sometimes. the chances are they will work, but i guess i am just scared to have it go wrong and then spend the next two hours fdiscing and reloading the os again.
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