|
|
|
Replies
(1 - 3)
|
Tue 25 Nov 2003, 13:50
|
Senior Member
Group: Members
Posts: 235
Joined: 25-Jul 02
From: Strongsville - US
Member No.: 6,217
|
I have a US-428 that came with the same OEM version of Cubasis, which is really only designed to give you a feel for how Cubase works but has enough limitations that you spend money to upgrade to the "full" version. Sure, you can bounce tracks. I have no experience with Cubasis/Cubase, but say you have the full 8 tracks - then do whatever it is they call it - bounce, mix down, export, etc. and then use the resulting combined track to add more stuff to. No, I don't see how you'd have more than 1 audio channel on a given track, but bouncing should take care of you. As for Audacity, again no experience, but if it's doing what you want it to, then use it. I don't believe it has MIDI capabilities, but if you don't need them then Audacity might be nice. Plus it'll run in OSX. The Cubase 5 you're looking at is an older fuller version (you won't see the OEM Cubasis for sale separately) - but if you look, that place only has the PC version only. Cubase SE/SL/SX are the current versions that run on OSX. Another cheap alternative is Metro 6 SE - about $80 but it only has 4 audio tracks. You could do the bounce thing, but if all you need is audio, I don't see any reason not to just keep using Audacity until you find that it's not doing something you need it to.
|
|
|
|
|
Tue 25 Nov 2003, 17:58
|
Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 8
Joined: 10-Oct 03
From: Chicago - US
Member No.: 26,452
|
Thanks for your response xingu, that was really helpful. I have one other question, and forgive me if this is a dumb question. Is there a difference in the quality of recording from one program to an other. i.e. can Cubase or say protools free or which ever program capture a higher quality sound than any other program, or is it the same digital information regardless of the program? And also is there a diffrence in the output quality? If there isn't, I'm probably going to stick with Audacity just because of the amount of tracks it has available.
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:
|
|