![]() ![]() I've been dabbling in studio one pro since 2013. ![]() Vahevahe wrote: know I'm going to get crap for this. Title: What in the world? (from Vahevahe) His playing and soloing just overides everything else. NO difference people!!!!!Frank sounds the same no matter what he is playing. When I knew him before he went to the US he could play a $100 strat or a $5000 guitar. ![]() When you really start focusing on the music then all the stuff seems insignificant.įrank Gambale is a famous guitarist and a personal friend of mine. How good is your music? Focus on that instead. There are way more important things like your music. If you are trying to say that one DAW sounds SOOOOO much better than another then that is rubbish. ![]() You will always arrive at the same end result. If another DAW sounds narrower in then you move them out slightly to still match the sound you want to hear. Then you move them back in slightly and create the exact image you want to hear. The sound in your head so to speak transcends all the DAW's by far.Įg suppose one DAW sounds wider in terms of panning. I can produce excatly the same sounding music and mixes no matter what DAW I use. Why? Because no matter what DAW you use you will always arrive at the same final result and that is the sound you hear in your head. It is also such a waste of time and meanlingless too. The moment there is more than one variable the test is null and void. I am very experienced at A/B testing from my old Hi Fi days. You are introducing a variable that you dont know about. I have been there and done all this and under the right conditions I have detected no differences in many DAW's whether incoming eg recording or playback eg summing. Still no good because the two computers may be different in some way.Įxpalin fully and in detail how you are going about this. Are you switching one interface between two computers. If so that is no good because the two interfaces may be different. Does that mean you have two computers and two separate interfaces. What do you mean both DAW's are on side by side. I can punch holes into all your testing procedures. You are still so vague about your testing. My experiment proved the playback side of the 4 DAW's was the same in every respect. I did that with 4 DAW's and got totally identical results and I mean identical. (that has been totally recorded on a separate DAW) Import both sessions into both DAW'sĪnd set all tracks to either LCR (and ensure the C pan law is the same for both) and at exactly the same levels. No panning laws involved now you see.Īre you testing the playback/summing side of both DAW's? Then if so you need to obtain a multitrack session such as I did im my test. Just post the two raw waves the two DAW's recorded in their Audio files folders. Why are you involving the Korg recorder at all? (another variable)įirstly are you testing the recording side of the DAW's? Then if so this is what you should do.įeed the drum machine (and that is a very poor test signal as well BTW) into your interface and into DAW 1 and record a stereo track. But that does not mean one DAW is different to the other. You can see that by looking and also it is not possible to obtain a perfect null either. There maybe something silly happening recording out of the DAW's and into the Korg that might be different.īoth those waves are not identical. You are not doing a controlled experiment and you are introducing too many variables as well. There are just so many flaws in your test. ![]()
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