Old Motifator threads are available in the Archive.
meatballfulton
![]() Total Posts: 3022
Joined 01-25-2005 status: Guru |
I’m considering moving to Logic Pro X. Remote Mode was baked into Motifs over a decade ago with the Classic while Logic has been though many revisions since then. Any gotchas I should be aware of? |
I_Too_Say_So_Long
Total Posts: 728
Joined 09-20-2011 status: Guru |
huh.... I must have missed this post.
Let us know what you find out. |
MapleCarbine
Total Posts: 40
Joined 12-11-2015 status: Regular |
Please could you explain what “It’s interesting the sonic resonance of different Daw’s” means Thank you. |
philwoodmusic
![]() Total Posts: 1055
Joined 07-01-2013 status: Guru |
As far as I know MapleCarbine, sonic resonance doesn’t exist as a scientific audio term, but, if you look around the internet, you will see people trying to boil water and even levitate using what they call “sonic resonance”. Cheers |
I_Too_Say_So_Long
Total Posts: 728
Joined 09-20-2011 status: Guru |
When compared to what the Motif XF produces from connecting a USB device to the back, that .wav is very empty with what we ‘round here refer to as
Each DAW produces a different mix down sound. We use Logic and Cubase.
Resonance
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MapleCarbine
Total Posts: 40
Joined 12-11-2015 status: Regular |
Thanks for the clarification Phil. Good to see you’re around still, I haven’t seen you post in a long time and trust me on this, your often lengthy posts here got me using Logic nicely, and very quickly. All the best to you. |
MapleCarbine
Total Posts: 40
Joined 12-11-2015 status: Regular |
I see, you made up your own term for something only you experience. Because Steinberg uses the word Sonic in an unrelated product title, then that backs up what you’re saying for sure. Thirdly, you’ve linked us in to a page about acoustic resonance, which is also unrelated. Sorry, I’m not with you. |
I_Too_Say_So_Long
Total Posts: 728
Joined 09-20-2011 status: Guru |
Sorry.
“Some hear, others listen,
Run the comparison.
Cheers!
added;
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MapleCarbine
Total Posts: 40
Joined 12-11-2015 status: Regular |
If you’re trying to troll the community then it was a nice effort, but a little bit sad on your part. Why else would you post what I would call ‘non help’ in an old thread where the OP has very likely moved on. By your own admission, you do not use Logic much, yet you feel compelled to post about it. We’ve all seen what you are capable of on this forum over the years, the post-thread editing to appear to look better or correct after the storm has blown over and to change the balance of the discussion, the avoiding blame by saying that a girl is posting in your name and then the constant evasive nickname changing. Not to mention a very repugnant thread that exists way back in the mo lounge. You’ve even edited your last post several times to dial back the mealy mouthed tone of it. Sorry bro. The stuff you posted on this thread is all in your head or just plain made up. If you heard an audible difference, then you were just doing it wrong or your experiment was colored or biased somehow. Also, if a DAW did sound different enough to hear, it would be documented and fixed. You evidently have a lot to learn about audio production and its related technology. I do too, but that’s life. |
philwoodmusic
![]() Total Posts: 1055
Joined 07-01-2013 status: Guru |
Guys, This thread is insane, it’s also become a bit disrespectful to meatballfulton who posted for advice a long time ago and never got any! Whilst I wouldn’t put it in such frank terms as MapleCarbine did, I agree with him. There is no evidence to suggest that either of those DAWs (or any other) sound audibly different and not acceptably transparent. I do the experiment several times a year, when stuff gets sent to me in Cubase and Logic format and I need to print it to WAV to transfer it over to Pro Tools. For those interested, I reckon I get sent between 200 and 300 multi tracks a year to work on and I would say that they come as Pro Tools 75% of the time, Logic around 20% of the time and Cubase (and other DAWs) for the rest. You can consider the senders of those multi tracks to be from a cross section of North American and United Kingdom current chart music. They are people with money and they have good advice or can simply buy it if they don’t. The Pro Tools percentage I mentioned is somewhat off because people often will convert their Logic or Cubase or whatever session to Pro Tools before sending it because they know that the music industry works with Pro Tools and that it suits me and my colleagues more than anything else. So you could reduce it a little bit. There are some interesting trends concerning who uses what: 1 - Motif owners commonly use Cubase because Yamaha hook them on it by bundling it with their products and affording them certain capabilities that they do not offer to users of other DAWs. 2 - People who make Electronic or Dance music commonly use DAWs like Ableton or Presonus Studio 1. 3 - People with Apple computers commonly use Logic, but since you rarely see a Windows PC in studios, there’s a lot of Logic going on. 4 - Pro Tools is commonly used for mixing and tracking I can tell you that the one thing that all of these products have in common is that they all sound alike and are transparent unless you want it otherwise. There is simply no way that things automatically sound worse in a big way in Logic or in Cubase when you’re used to using another DAW. Certainly not without additional processing or differences in hardware. They’re all good products in that respect. |
I_Too_Say_So_Long
Total Posts: 728
Joined 09-20-2011 status: Guru |
@Phil
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philwoodmusic
![]() Total Posts: 1055
Joined 07-01-2013 status: Guru |
Even without any processing or differences in hardware. there may well be differences, but nothing that isn’t either illusory or less than negligible and not easily understood. You described hearing an empty sound. That’s quite a statement and observation. I doubt you need an ENT, but you may have certain export preferences ticked which you do not have ticked in Cubase or they don’t exist in Cubase. Normalize is a good culprit as is accidentally exporting to mp3 (easy to do on Logic) As for the sound of your mix, it’s natural to make better sounding mixes with your preferred DAW, but that’s because of you and not the DAW. |
I_Too_Say_So_Long
Total Posts: 728
Joined 09-20-2011 status: Guru |
When describing an ‘empty sound’ ; in our beginnings with the Motif XF was the USB port in the back of the board that makes .wav’s of songs. This was what we had used before Daw’s.
Needing an ENT was humor, mine, I guess and only mine :) I originally made certain I was not adding any compression as I had caught Cubase producing AIF-C (for compression) and at that point immediately switched to .WAV.
I don’t edit at the point of DAW be it audio or midi. When it arrives in the daw it is done as a song with exception of added audio tracks for backing vocals if any.
Cheers
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