MacMusic.org  |  PcMusic.org  |  440Software  |  440Forums.com  |  440Tv  |  Zicos.com  |  AudioLexic.org
Loading... visitors connected
Welcome Guest
> Making Music With A New Ibook, Looking for setup help
musicteacher
post Sat 7 Dec 2002, 21:00
Post #1


Newbie


Group: Members
Posts: 10
Joined: 08-Dec 01
From: Queens
Member No.: 2,607




I am a public school music teacher who is thinking about getting a new iBook to use as a portable music making tool. Here's what I would like to do with it:

1. Sequence backing tracks in various musical styles for my students to play along with in class. I'd want to burn these backing tracks onto cd and bring them into the classroom so my kids can jam to a calypso-style "This Land Is Your Land" or whatever. What would be good software to do this with an iBook?

2. Record my own music and my students music either live or track by track - what is the best way to get sound into an iBook?

3. Begin to explore the world of software synths. Which ones are easy to use and can interact well with the software/hardware used for the above two items?

I hope that's clear enough. I'd appreciate any suggestions. If there's anyone answering who lives in the NYC area and can help me in person with this I'd be really grateful. Thank you for supporting public education.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
 
Start new topic
Replies
rickenbacker
post Wed 11 Dec 2002, 16:58
Post #2


Maniac Member
******

Group: Members
Posts: 645
Joined: 17-May 02
From: Broughton
Member No.: 4,705




Logic 5.x, Cubase SX, Pro Tools, Bias Deck & Peak, Storm 2.0, Reason 2.0 and Live 2.0 all run on OS X (10.2 preferred). Digital Performer is the only "major" sequencer yet to transfer to OS X.

There is also an OS X-specific Midi-only sequencing application called Intuem, which is OK and pretty cheap, though it has had teething troubles. With software, you generally get what you pay for.

Older soft synths like the Native Instrument collection do not run on OS X yet. There is also the issue of VST vs Audio Units for plug-ins in OS X: Logic only allows Audio Units, Cubase only VST. Thus, when you make a choice about your sequencer, you're making a choice about your future plug-in options.

Audio Units are the preferred choice for Mac musicians on OS X, being based at system-level and thus more efficient than VST, but there is good stuff appearing for VST in OS X. Storm 2.0, for instance, is VST-based, so could plug-in to Cubase but not Logic.

ReWire is another concern: Logic 5 in OS X still doesn't support it, Cubase does. So if you have Reason 2.0 for the synths, you can hook it up to Cubase or Live, say, for the multitrack sequencing and audio recording.

A good budget system (relatively speaking, as it always is with computers) would be Reason 2.0 and Live 2.0 and hook them up via ReWire. That way you get Midi and audio recording, plus an excellent collection of soft synths in Reason and Live's creative, flexible approach to recording/remixing.

Alternatively, Storm is a good cheap option, with Logic Platinum the best there is, IMHO. In most sequencers you get a few free synths and FX, too, so you can get started straight away.

Personally, I use Reason, Live, Storm and Logic on a 600MHz iBook, all in OS X. My interface is an Edirol UA-700, via USB, which I bought because of the onboard FX and guitar amp / microphone modelling sections, which are really great. It's also got every kind of connection you could ever need.

I've tried most of the interfaces around (under £500, anyway) and I like the Edirol stuff a lot. The UA-5 is another great solution if you don't need the extra FX: it has all the connections of the UA-700. The only drawback is the OS X drivers are still being worked out - for the most part the Beta driver works fine, but I'd still like them to finish the job!

FireWire is faster and some people will tell you USB is too slow for music, but if you're only recording a couple of tracks at a time, USB is fine. It's only a problem if you try to record and playback something like 8+ sources at once - miking up a live orchestra, say. For 2-in, 2-out recording, USB is fine.

Hope that helps and doesn't make the matter even more complicated! blink.gif
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post

Posts in this topic
- musicteacher   Making Music With A New Ibook   Sat 7 Dec 2002, 21:00
- - ghess   musicteacher, An organization that you might find...   Mon 9 Dec 2002, 17:26
- - Hamish   The absolute simplest option would be to get a gen...   Wed 11 Dec 2002, 17:57
- - BagHun   QUOTE (rickenbacker @ Dec 11 2002, 09:58)Logi...   Wed 11 Dec 2002, 19:36
- - goldmike   Hi everybody, I´m working on a iBook 700 Mhz with ...   Thu 12 Dec 2002, 11:01
- - rickenbacker   Baghun: OK, Pro Tools X isn't out yet, but it...   Thu 12 Dec 2002, 16:01
- - musicteacher   Thank you all for all of this helpful information....   Thu 12 Dec 2002, 22:54
- - rickenbacker   Noooo! Don't do it! Don't go back ...   Fri 13 Dec 2002, 15:46
- - ryosode   Wait Rickenbacker, as it currently stands, I belie...   Fri 13 Dec 2002, 22:20
- - musicteacher   My fear is that after I get my new iBook (if I in ...   Sun 15 Dec 2002, 16:53
- - ghess   Musicteacher; There are two online resources whic...   Mon 16 Dec 2002, 14:22
- - jmax   Take a look at Harvestworks they have a number of ...   Mon 16 Dec 2002, 19:05
- - ryosode   NYC being a huge market for multimedia, I bet ther...   Tue 17 Dec 2002, 23:27
- - bowsk   If i can just throw in a query, Is there a major d...   Thu 9 Jan 2003, 01:30
- - rickenbacker   Bowsk: there's no difference between recording...   Thu 9 Jan 2003, 13:16
- - charlieb   Hi Rickenbacker, When you talk about "and add...   Thu 9 Jan 2003, 15:57
- - Presto   I'm no expert but have an ibook600 with 384 Ra...   Thu 9 Jan 2003, 17:12
- - rickenbacker   charlieb: I mean that whatever Mac you own, you...   Fri 10 Jan 2003, 13:27


Reply to this topicStart new topic
2 User(s) are reading this topic (2 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:

 

Lo-Fi Version - Sun 7 Jul 2024, 19:22
- © MacMusic 1997-2008