![]() Studio One is another one.The Elastic Audio editor in Relative Mode, shown docked. Plus you can't beat the flexible licensing. As for value and less cost to keep up to date is FL, Bandlab, and Reaper. When I get a softsynth or presets I audition them in Bandlab. ![]() ![]() The popular DAWs are the ones designed for dance music workflow. Cakewalk started doing that after about Sonar 3 and I started walking away despite the only license I didn't have in my collection was Sonar 6. As a DAW collector I'm starting to keep track of how frequent one needs to pay up to keep up to date. Which DAW:s do you recommend most for musicians using lots of VST-instruments, but not really into EDM-stuff that Ableton and FL studio seems to be targeted against? I hope Bandlab continues to work on Sonar/Cakewalk and also Rapture. I believe Samplitude is a powerhouse, but still I really miss Logic on PC - that is my favourite DAW so far. I guess Ableton is the best DAW out now, but I´m not really into looping and sequencing, I want to write a song and record it, with good Vst-plugins that are fun to play with, and good effects for live instuments. Their annual overprized upgrades are annoying, but I love their Vst-plugins. I think it's a really good DAW, but not very intuitive. Bought Acid very cheap and then moved on with Samplitude. ![]() Humble bundle introduced me to the Magix -stuff. Moved on by using the free-version of Studio One that came bundled with my MIDI-keyboard, but didn´t like it. But the first DAW I bought was Sonar on Steam, started to learn its functions and started to use it - then became quite frustrated when Cakewalk was closed 2 months after I bought their DAW. The first DAW I learned to use was Logic - on PC, then Cubase when Logic went all MAC. ![]()
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