I have loved this piece since i was a child less than half my age. here tonight you have given me the gift of hearing so many of my favorite tunes again for the first time.... it was a sleepless night and now it is splendid!
@Neblung And also, midi sequencing with sonar is a royal pain in the ass (this is my only Sonar video, the others are Cubase). No joke, no fanboy-acting, everyone who has thorougly tested both will agree.
@Neblung btw in case you don't understand, Sonar is the host and not the instrument. However the Cakewalk test bundle thing I got included Dimension Pro, which is an all-round VSTi featuring a wide range of fairly good instruments. I continued to use Dimension Pro in Cubase until the whole Cakewalk License expired and then got ewql so gold
I'm looking into DAWs, and I can't decide between Sonar, Cubase and FL Studio. Eventually I'll purchase EWQL Gold for the sound samples and I'm trying not to find anything with 'overlapping' functions, which is confusing the heck out of me.
ewql is absolutely great, yet requires a learning/testing-phase to use properly. And i'd go with Cubase as I wrote in the description. It's expensive (but woo I'm a student and who cares I'm studying electronic engineering), but also has more advanced technical features. This unfortunately implies that it's way harder for a beginner to understand than Sonar is.
Well, I have classical music background, so I guess if I can translate all those italian phrases to their equivalents on a DAW, I guess it could work?
I think I am leaning toward Cubase, after some extended conversations with the music managers where I purchased my guitar. Thanks for the suggestions!
Actially there is a lot more to it than translating expressions into that. You need quite a bit of technical understanding of MIDI and how vst works, and you have to find tons of workarounds to make things sound like you want them. There is no such thing as a general formula or all-purpose workaround on how to orchestrate sheet music.
I have loved this piece since i was a child less than half my age. here tonight you have given me the gift of hearing so many of my favorite tunes again for the first time.... it was a sleepless night and now it is splendid!
WindJesterGames 9 months ago
So does this work similar to FL Studio except with obviously better sounding instruments?
Neblung 1 year ago
@Neblung And also, midi sequencing with sonar is a royal pain in the ass (this is my only Sonar video, the others are Cubase). No joke, no fanboy-acting, everyone who has thorougly tested both will agree.
illuminatus13 1 year ago
@Neblung btw in case you don't understand, Sonar is the host and not the instrument. However the Cakewalk test bundle thing I got included Dimension Pro, which is an all-round VSTi featuring a wide range of fairly good instruments. I continued to use Dimension Pro in Cubase until the whole Cakewalk License expired and then got ewql so gold
illuminatus13 1 year ago
That.. was.. splendid.
U9B 1 year ago
Very nice piece! I like the complexity of it.
I'm looking into DAWs, and I can't decide between Sonar, Cubase and FL Studio. Eventually I'll purchase EWQL Gold for the sound samples and I'm trying not to find anything with 'overlapping' functions, which is confusing the heck out of me.
toki535 2 years ago
ewql is absolutely great, yet requires a learning/testing-phase to use properly. And i'd go with Cubase as I wrote in the description. It's expensive (but woo I'm a student and who cares I'm studying electronic engineering), but also has more advanced technical features. This unfortunately implies that it's way harder for a beginner to understand than Sonar is.
illuminatus13 2 years ago
Well, I have classical music background, so I guess if I can translate all those italian phrases to their equivalents on a DAW, I guess it could work?
I think I am leaning toward Cubase, after some extended conversations with the music managers where I purchased my guitar. Thanks for the suggestions!
P.S. I graduated from engineering too! :D
toki535 2 years ago
Actially there is a lot more to it than translating expressions into that. You need quite a bit of technical understanding of MIDI and how vst works, and you have to find tons of workarounds to make things sound like you want them. There is no such thing as a general formula or all-purpose workaround on how to orchestrate sheet music.
illuminatus13 2 years ago
just awesome i love your versions
keep it going
cccpfish 2 years ago