![]() ![]() In fact, the guys that built Studio One used to work on Cubase I believe. That just isn't the case as Studio One has as far as I can tell all the features and then some that Pro Tools, Cubase etc. I highly recommend it to anyone especially the guy or gal just starting out that may think they need to drop more bucks on the Pro Tools. Overall, the upgrades visually and workflow wise from v1 are very nice and I'm really starting to get a little dangerous as I've worked with this Studio One DAW for a little over 2 years now. ![]() You'd be well served to have a 64 bit system with lots of RAM if you want to use more than a couple instances of this plug in. Super sweet Kenny! Only drawback is that it does eat up alot of CPU power. In essence you now have the power to easily fix off/bad notes in pretty much any instrument you may be recording. You can go into guitar chords and change individual notes or just tune up a bad vocal note. It is super easy to use and the results of what you can do are amazing. I've been tinkering with this plug in for the past week and it is simply mindblowing. Studio One v2 comes with a bunch of upgrades, sounds, loops, features the biggest of which could be considered the melodyne auto tuning plug in. After two years of using it I paid the $150 to upgrade it to Presonus's new offering Studio One Professional version 2.īoth versions are fantastic choices of DAW software for both the noob and the long time recording artist. It came with Presonus's Studio Artist One. So I settled on the Presonus Firestudio Mobile interface cause its inexpensive and arguably the best interface for ~$250 to $300. I'm a smart shopper and don't like to make purchasing decisions without doing a great deal of homework first. Started building my poor man's home studio about 2 years ago.
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