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Inner Music
| Posted: 27 July 2010 at 11:10am
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MacBook Pro i7 platform - trying to decide between Logic Studio and Pro Tools. Anyone out there who can compare/contrast these two different recording programs?
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agonyfx
| Posted: 27 July 2010 at 12:59pm
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What are you using it for? Digital composition, film audio post production, live recording, mixing, etc.
I don't have experience with Logic Pro because I don't have a Mac, but I believe you can demo them both for free.
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Inner Music
| Posted: 28 July 2010 at 8:51am
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Thanks for the clarifying question. I am a guitar player, bedroom studio, have hardware synths and drum machines for backing tracks. I'm looking at mostly music composition and crafting backing tracks for live performance. I also shoot hd video and will probably be doing some sound tracks.
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medusapro
| Posted: 06 September 2010 at 12:13am
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I have to say as a user of both i would have to put my money on Logic. Bang for the buck it offers about the same feature set as Pro Tools HD for much less money.... and it was designed with composers in mind.
d
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Justin TZ
| Posted: 10 September 2010 at 1:06am
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Logic. Especially if you can score an educational discount. It's a robust
program and does offer most of what pro tools HD offers. The software
instruments that come with it aren't too shabby, but you may want to invest
in some NI suites.
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Inner Music
| Posted: 10 September 2010 at 9:29am
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Thanks leaning towards Logic, especially appreciate the Mainstage application since laptop makes use in live performance that much more likely. My mind has been lately boggled by Firewire Interfaces and the big jump from the $500 range to the over $1,000 range. Still trying to get good pro audio review information.
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medusapro
| Posted: 10 September 2010 at 12:34pm
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what are your requirements regarding an interface?
how many channels, no latency monitoring?
D
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medusapro
| Posted: 11 September 2010 at 9:08pm
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Inner Music, Srry we got cut off the other day. Give me a ring when you get a chance.
Dave
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BrianC
| Posted: 05 December 2010 at 12:37am
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Sonar producer.... any edition.
It's a heavy program though... need a lotta RAM and memory... but it's worth it.
my personal preference IMHO that is
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the-lou
| Posted: 08 December 2010 at 8:56am
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Cubase is another great program. I use it as my main platform and I
have tried them all(a lot of them anyway).also base a great pitch
correction very compatible to auto tune.
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