People who use reaper are the type of people to wake up in new york at 6 am and instantly get sunlight, drink a cup of coffee and start working on their business
it's like he's reading straight off the marketing copy every time. i can't even imagine what this video is supposed to do - clearly it's not meant to be a balanced view of a range of products for people who are undecided on which to use, because he didn't even mention that garageband is mac only which i think is crucial information. i'd call it journalistic malpractice if it mattered literally at all
Cakewalk actually started in 1987 was rebranded as Sonar around 2003 or 4 i think not sure, then acquired by Bandlab in 2018 and rebranded back to Cakewalk.
reaper is also used by camellia (one of the biggest j-core edm artists), which shows its versatility in many genres such as hardcore edm, dubstep, 200step, drum n bass, breakcore, electro swing and more
Because actually explaining in depth the features of each daw is too difficult versus saying "if you use this 400 dollars tool you will sound just like this artist" is way better for youtube audiences who can't tell apart eq from compression
The difference here between all daws… and this is a HUGE difference: according to the content creator, the only DAW that is used for scoring is all of them. 🤷🏻🤷🏻🤷🏻🤷🏻🤷🏻
@@SuperRedstonemanyoutube audiences fan definitely tell those two apart. I think those are two really obvious examples because people know what compression and equipment sound like
I use Acoustica Mixcraft Pro Studio 10, been using Mixcraft since v5. Whenever people ask what DAW I use, they always go "oh huh never heard of that one" lol.
I used Mixcraft from like version 5-8, and then switched to Studio One. I like Mixcraft, but it was really buggy near the end there and time to move on, since I had a free version of Studio One Artist with an interface I bought. Now that Studio One is switching to a singular version next month for a lower price than before, I think it was a good decision.
Love Reaper for editing audio for podcasts and Ableton's Live for everything related to music production. The keyboard controlled piano roll is my one true love for sequencing. Shout out to Renoise, a modern tracker DAW
Trackers are probably not considered DAWs by some in spite of the fact that many of the video games tunes that I grew up with (and enjoyed) were created in trackers.
@@braimahbeatzofficial i'm surprised! Luna is UAD's platform. Harrison mix bus is an analog emulation of one of their consoles and some engineers swear by it. Ardour i've heard about foreverbut since i'm not a linux user i never tried it out. and LMMS i heard about recently but also not a linux user soo... oh and one more that i forgot about but own: Digital Performer. it's MOTU's platform that used to be huge. it has some pretty cool features and was very innovative early on, so much so that cubase and other DAWs implemented some of their ideas.
@@CreativeMindsAudioin fairness I've never seen anyone talk about LUNA until it went free I know people who use UAD stuff and they've never mentioned it
Sometimes these are word salads, but I get it: you cannot explain every DAW's strengths and weaknesses without a table-grid.I recently switched from FL Studio to Bitwig (ONLY because I switched OS's to Linux, NOT because I was unsatisfied with FL Studio). Bitwig seems to be designed for modular sound design while FL Studio CAN do modular setups, it just requires a few more clicks and workarounds per step. Bitwig is pretty much for those that like Reaktor, but faster and a bit easier. I'm really liking Bitwig in Penguin-land and for those of you thinking about cutting ties with Microsoft, Bitwig is a fantastic option.
Bitwig isn't really like reaktor I find a better comparison is that its a weird hybrid of the energy and workflow of Ableton with the care fir ease and simplicity from FL. Having the grid doesn't make it reaktor because by that logic so is Ableton
@@illford I've never used Ableton, so I'm glad to hear from someone who has. Yes, Reaktor does not have the omni-connective logic of Poly Grid (Reaktor separates the signals categorically by default), but you are still developing DSP but at a higher level (hence: easier). I can also see parallels to FL Studio's Patcher. However, what you say makes sense due to the fact that some ex-Ableton developers went on to form Bitwig.
Cakewalk was a sequencer first developed by Twelve Tone Systems, Inc. (the company later known as Cakewalk, Inc.). Originally for DOS, starting with version Cakewalk 1.0 in 1987
Cakewalk and for good reason. It natively supports 32bit plugins and 64bit plugins. Meaning if you got an old plugin you like the sound of but not a DAW that can load it, well now you do! and I have a BUNCH of those. I'm also pretty sure its simple functionality to add and not sure if since I started using cakewalk any other DAW had it.
Not that it matters! You can make a hit on every DAW that is listed here and every daw that is not listed here. The hit angle in this video is useless and inaccurate information. Likely the OP has his favorite DAW and its in this video
@@jeremevr6 i know, the only reason i didn't comment on the misinfo was cause i read his description and i really liked it... also you redditor?!?!?! 🤣🤣🤣
Bandlab has actually had alot of hits in the underground rap scene where artists have recorded their songs on there. Notably Lazer Dim 700 - asian rock and Nettspend - we dont like you
Reaper is the industry standard in game audio. It has been used to make sounds for pretty much 90% of all big games in the last decade. But when it comes to songs, there are a lot of big time producers, composers etc. who use Reaper like - Tori Letzler, Tj Lindgren, Wilbert Roget (who composed all cod ww2 soundtracks, mk11 soundtrack, helldivers 2 soundtracks and more in reaper), Steve Davis, Camellia, Tycho etc.
I'm in the trap area of music and everyone uses FL studio. Crazy because no one uses Reaper and trying to find current videos is like a needle in a haystack
I think it is because their user base is very heavily concentrated in Europe. Of course there are Americans using Cubase, but here in Germany it is basically the standard for many genres
@@MoLauer ahh, I understand, this gave me clarity about... here in Brazil it is more common to use FL and Ableton, only the big studios here that I see using Pro Tools, but for mtg funk, phonk and music of that type, it is just FL lol, what genres are most common to do there, I know there's a lot of "EDM" right? what others?
@jeremevr6 he's right A. It's the longest charting song within the top 10 B. If you go by the Billboard metric it IS the best song of all time as they factor in weeks at number one, weeks in top 10 and weeks in the top 100 Furthermore it was the first song to ever hit 4 billion streams on Spotify making it the most streamed song
3:40 I'm sure soooo many hits have been made with Reaper, we just don't know it. Sooooo many people use Reaper. I know some professional mastering engineers that prefer reaper over anything. I'm one year away from my production degree, I own Logic and FL but Reaper will never ever leave my workflow
I mean Renoise isn't that common nowadays at least. If you got 100 producers together it is unlikely that you'd fine someone who uses Renoise as their main driver.
I'd also say Reaper is very popular among bedroom metal musicians! I use FL Studio for anything that involves midi programming and Reaper for mixing stems and testing out guitar plugins
i 1000% thought this was gonna be way more of a joke as a ableton user trashing on other daws is my bread and butter just because all producers trash each other as a joke whenever they be using different daws , Good looks giving the peoples actually quality info keep it up my dude u should do this for digital synths
Fun Fact. Cubase a really popular DAW in Japan and is used by most home producers and is used in studios along with Pro Tools and Ableton! It got really popular in Japan in the late 2000s due to its compatibility with Vocal Synth software around the time of the rise of Hatsune Miku
fun fact: garageband is also developped by apple alongside logic pro, so in a way, logic pro is garage band professioanl edition (there is also a similar thing with iMovie and Final Cut Pro)
i jump between fl studio, openmpt, LMMS, and vocaloid/utau/vsynth my first daw was garageband and then I switched to bandlabs and then fl studio, did you know camellia uses reaper, have you seen his screenshots??? he needs like 128 gb lol. for other composers, I've heard that ZUN uses cubase.
Excellent video! But DAWs like LMMS and Zrythm are missing here. Can you please make another one only for the free DAWs? Include Zrythm also, please! (It's a new DAW, currently in beta. Available for windows, Linux, and MacOS.) Thanks in advance!
And LinuxMultiMediaStudio LMMS: I used it together with Audacity for several years before going back to self-written software and Audacity for mixing&mastering.
whats the name of the first song? It's soooo good, I've heard it in the past, but never knew the name of it. And i can't find it on the channel of roccowchiptune
It makes sense Fairlight in Davinci Resolve isn't in this video because if you knew about it, you would've changed the stereo audio track to mono and lowered the audio to a level that doesn't over power your voice. You know, like someone who actually knows enough about DAWs to make this video.
Help me w this! I need to know why. I’m about to do a metal gig and I feel like metal is never mentioned w any DAW… I keep imagining that metal is still an analog thing-which is totally delusional of me.
@@jeremevr6 metal is not that different from any other genre, really. I would recommend watching nail the mix youtube videos or siging up for nail the mix. I think the things you have to master for metal is how gating and saturation works. Plus how to make everything in a mix works so you're able to hear everything and how to queue certain parts so they stick out, because if you're not careful about mixing and emgineering then some things can get buried in it. This stuff is like a puzzle. Like i said though, metal isn't that much different from learning to mix and engineer other genres. I have no clue how to do live gigs though. I'm just a bedroom musician lol. I would also recommend hanging around people that are in this feild too. Careful how much you spend too because a lot can get pricy despite the fact that there's a lot of great free stuff out there. Hopefully something in this wall of text helps. Best of luck on your journey.
artists like skillrex and mau5dead
Imagine if a TTS voice said Skrillex
@@TrizziEhganskorlez
Bro said mau5dead instead of deadmau5.
@@THRESHOLDlnOH MY GOD REALLLLLLLL!!!!1!1!1!1!1!1!
@@someoneoutofthisworld Bro has a NCS visualizer as a profile picture.
my left ear really enjoyed this music
mine hated it, cause right one was envious
@@cwircwircwir 😭
People who use reaper are the type of people to wake up in new york at 6 am and instantly get sunlight, drink a cup of coffee and start working on their business
They also probably wear turtle necks with blazers
well the creator of reaper lives in new york so you got that right.
Reaper user here. My life is all over the place lol
I'm getting started with Reaper, so...
Ok
When you have no idea what you’re talking about but you keep on yapping.
For real tho feels like bro is just reading the first few sentences from the wikipedia pages
...good choice for films and game scores
it's like he's reading straight off the marketing copy every time. i can't even imagine what this video is supposed to do - clearly it's not meant to be a balanced view of a range of products for people who are undecided on which to use, because he didn't even mention that garageband is mac only which i think is crucial information. i'd call it journalistic malpractice if it mattered literally at all
@@roembol ah yes, pro tools, the worlds most beloved daw
He? You mean the AI voice?
Cakewalk actually started in 1987 was rebranded as Sonar around 2003 or 4 i think not sure, then acquired by Bandlab in 2018 and rebranded back to Cakewalk.
But this guy says it was released in 2018-I’m gonna go w the conspiracy theory here and believe the OP. /s
Followed by turning into Cakewalk Sonar
Yeah I could have sworn I used this in the late 90s. Hearing him say that it started recently confused me.
Thank-you.
reaper is also used by camellia (one of the biggest j-core edm artists), which shows its versatility in many genres such as hardcore edm, dubstep, 200step, drum n bass, breakcore, electro swing and more
Literally what I was about to say lol
had no idea who camellia was prior to reading this so i checked and the beats are super tight and impressive 👍 also,,, artwork on the songs is sick
Fuck electroswing.
@@13days13 yay, I love seeing people discover camellia for the first time
You won't regret it
@@stereokuuji reall and especially for ppl like me who make alot of his style music
for a video about music, you REALLY need to learn how to pan music in the background
I don't think he found the same issue of panning like what was found in a video about MP3 players over Spotify
Audacity snubbed
And Ardour! Everyone forgets about Ardour
@@aheendwhz1 and Audition
and LMMS
the audacity
Audacity isn’t a true DAW if it can’t edit midi or use VSTi plugins!
i went from bandlab to cakewalk to logic to fl studio
ended on a banger
wow, youll either end it all on Ableton, Studio One or Reaper.
@@DarkTrapStudio i think ill end on fl bc i really like it and i dont think ill need to upgrade also im 14 so i cant really spend much on another daw
@@mynameisPEEHS That exactly what Im saying, you got much much years to end on another DAW.
Your awesome doing this at 14 :)
@@mynameisPEEHS Im still on fl 20. Cuz iz cracked
2:09 no way bro said "skillrex"
Skillrex
cube base
suit instead of suite
@@gb.510 city instead of shitty (lol)
Squirrel Wax
@@FromJosh fyi studio
Tried almost all of them and ended up with Reaper.
Haa ha same
I've tried 5 from this list and ended up with Reaper. The most customizable and most flexible DAW in my opinion.
The 'is it famous for making a hit?' angle seems odd.
Because actually explaining in depth the features of each daw is too difficult versus saying "if you use this 400 dollars tool you will sound just like this artist" is way better for youtube audiences who can't tell apart eq from compression
@@SuperRedstonemanyeah…. not much meat and potatoes here w the info.
The difference here between all daws… and this is a HUGE difference: according to the content creator, the only DAW that is used for scoring is all of them. 🤷🏻🤷🏻🤷🏻🤷🏻🤷🏻
@@SuperRedstonemanand why do we need to know the year it came out? Most of these ended up getting scooped up by bigger software companies anyways.
@@SuperRedstonemanyoutube audiences fan definitely tell those two apart. I think those are two really obvious examples because people know what compression and equipment sound like
not mentioning LMMS is a crime smh
RIGHT, even renoise isn't mentioned
Also Ardour is really great of everything audio related (though it also can do midi, but the workflow is less refined)
WHO???
WHO????
WHO?
No way bro forgot audacity
Erm… actually…
The greatest daw
He also forgot the OG - MS Paint😆
Wow… the audacity…
Audacity isn't really a DAW.
At the end of the day it doesn't matter which DAW u use, if u are a good producer/musician, u can do everything on any DAW
Yes! 💯
I use Acoustica Mixcraft Pro Studio 10, been using Mixcraft since v5. Whenever people ask what DAW I use, they always go "oh huh never heard of that one" lol.
This but I switched from Pro 9 to Cubase cause it was a mess when rendering tracks 😭
the life of us mixcraft users is never getting acknowledged ever lol
oh huh never heard of that one
I used Mixcraft from like version 5-8, and then switched to Studio One. I like Mixcraft, but it was really buggy near the end there and time to move on, since I had a free version of Studio One Artist with an interface I bought. Now that Studio One is switching to a singular version next month for a lower price than before, I think it was a good decision.
Mixcraft 10 Pro is fire. 💯
I´m a nerd for this. Ty for the video.
Love Reaper for editing audio for podcasts and Ableton's Live for everything related to music production. The keyboard controlled piano roll is my one true love for sequencing. Shout out to Renoise, a modern tracker DAW
Trackers are probably not considered DAWs by some in spite of the fact that many of the video games tunes that I grew up with (and enjoyed) were created in trackers.
@@brianbergmusic5288Technically you can still use Fast Tracker II.
Just saying…
i went from waveform to fl studio to ableton to wavform, and 3 years later im still on waveform, truly my most favorite DAW
Agreed, it's like abelton but without the price. Tho, there are some limitations with the sampler
@@alanlee9943u tried Waveform but it doesn't really feel like Ableton to me
Missing from the list:
Audacity
Luna
Harrison mix bus
Ardour (Linux)
LMMS (Linux)
Never heard of those. Maybe he’ll make a part 2
@@braimahbeatzofficial i'm surprised!
Luna is UAD's platform.
Harrison mix bus is an analog emulation of one of their consoles and some engineers swear by it.
Ardour i've heard about foreverbut since i'm not a linux user i never tried it out. and LMMS i heard about recently but also not a linux user soo...
oh and one more that i forgot about but own: Digital Performer. it's MOTU's platform that used to be huge. it has some pretty cool features and was very innovative early on, so much so that cubase and other DAWs implemented some of their ideas.
@@CreativeMindsAudioin fairness I've never seen anyone talk about LUNA until it went free I know people who use UAD stuff and they've never mentioned it
@@CreativeMindsAudioalso Ardour and LMMS are on Windows they aren't Linux only and I'm pretty sure LMMS' largest userbase is probably Windows
LMMS is windows too
Sometimes these are word salads, but I get it: you cannot explain every DAW's strengths and weaknesses without a table-grid.I recently switched from FL Studio to Bitwig (ONLY because I switched OS's to Linux, NOT because I was unsatisfied with FL Studio). Bitwig seems to be designed for modular sound design while FL Studio CAN do modular setups, it just requires a few more clicks and workarounds per step. Bitwig is pretty much for those that like Reaktor, but faster and a bit easier. I'm really liking Bitwig in Penguin-land and for those of you thinking about cutting ties with Microsoft, Bitwig is a fantastic option.
Bitwig isn't really like reaktor I find a better comparison is that its a weird hybrid of the energy and workflow of Ableton with the care fir ease and simplicity from FL. Having the grid doesn't make it reaktor because by that logic so is Ableton
@@illford I've never used Ableton, so I'm glad to hear from someone who has. Yes, Reaktor does not have the omni-connective logic of Poly Grid (Reaktor separates the signals categorically by default), but you are still developing DSP but at a higher level (hence: easier). I can also see parallels to FL Studio's Patcher. However, what you say makes sense due to the fact that some ex-Ableton developers went on to form Bitwig.
i really should learn bitwig. it's kind of a shame i like reaper so much because it makes me not want to try anything else
Traction Waveform is super underrated
Bro turn off that annoying music😭😭😭
Its only one the legt side and it burns
It's burned*
switch to right at 1:19 Its a marketing technique. (aka trolling for comments)
then stereo
@@DarkTrapStudio learn english better
@@modables Both apply actually, and your english syntax is shit I won't take advice from you.
REAPER is what I use and good lord, its customization is huge. I love colorful stuff and REAPER has some cool themes out there.
Cakewalk was a sequencer first developed by Twelve Tone Systems, Inc. (the company later known as Cakewalk, Inc.).
Originally for DOS, starting with version Cakewalk 1.0 in 1987
Yeah. I was quite mystified about it being initially released in 2018!!!!!! How do I get off living in this alternate timeline?
@@jeremevr6 try halucinogens :)
Reaper Gang!!
Cakewalk and for good reason. It natively supports 32bit plugins and 64bit plugins. Meaning if you got an old plugin you like the sound of but not a DAW that can load it, well now you do! and I have a BUNCH of those. I'm also pretty sure its simple functionality to add and not sure if since I started using cakewalk any other DAW had it.
Yeah. REAPER has actually been used in many major records. To be totally honest and fair, there's a bunch of platinum records to cover every DAW.
Not that it matters! You can make a hit on every DAW that is listed here and every daw that is not listed here. The hit angle in this video is useless and inaccurate information. Likely the OP has his favorite DAW and its in this video
@@jeremevr6 i know, the only reason i didn't comment on the misinfo was cause i read his description and i really liked it... also you redditor?!?!?! 🤣🤣🤣
@@LeChapeauMusic sorry what?
@@jeremevr6 you said "OP" which is not really a RUclips thing hahah
Bandlab has actually had alot of hits in the underground rap scene where artists have recorded their songs on there. Notably Lazer Dim 700 - asian rock and Nettspend - we dont like you
FL GANGGGG
meee
here
Reaper is the industry standard in game audio. It has been used to make sounds for pretty much 90% of all big games in the last decade.
But when it comes to songs, there are a lot of big time producers, composers etc. who use Reaper like - Tori Letzler, Tj Lindgren, Wilbert Roget (who composed all cod ww2 soundtracks, mk11 soundtrack, helldivers 2 soundtracks and more in reaper), Steve Davis, Camellia, Tycho etc.
I'm in the trap area of music and everyone uses FL studio. Crazy because no one uses Reaper and trying to find current videos is like a needle in a haystack
@@allworksnew in the beatmaking scene, there aren't many people using reaper, but you can still find some. Learning Reaper on YT is a big one.
For sound design, yes, but Pro Tools still reigns supreme for voiceover and soundtracks, though other DAWs are gaining ground fast.
@@nickmonks9563 lol
@@ranajoyshil Laugh all you want, man, but I've got checks from Sony, Activision, Ubisoft, and EA that say it's true.
Cubase is never remembered for its popular songs, like The Weeknd, Ava Max, Zedd, Dua Lipa... 😔
I think it is because their user base is very heavily concentrated in Europe. Of course there are Americans using Cubase, but here in Germany it is basically the standard for many genres
@@MoLauer ahh, I understand, this gave me clarity about... here in Brazil it is more common to use FL and Ableton, only the big studios here that I see using Pro Tools, but for mtg funk, phonk and music of that type, it is just FL lol, what genres are most common to do there, I know there's a lot of "EDM" right? what others?
And “Blinding Lights” absolutely didn’t have the longest streak in the history of Billboard… nope. All that was just something the media imagined up.
@@jeremevr6 but it did...
@jeremevr6 he's right
A. It's the longest charting song within the top 10
B. If you go by the Billboard metric it IS the best song of all time as they factor in weeks at number one, weeks in top 10 and weeks in the top 100
Furthermore it was the first song to ever hit 4 billion streams on Spotify making it the most streamed song
3:40 I'm sure soooo many hits have been made with Reaper, we just don't know it. Sooooo many people use Reaper. I know some professional mastering engineers that prefer reaper over anything.
I'm one year away from my production degree, I own Logic and FL but Reaper will never ever leave my workflow
skillrex 💀
rip lmms ✊
WHO?
I agree.
Nice to see an overview of all major daws without mocking them
i use the free version of waveform , ¿there's smoebody else using waveform or it's just me ?
🖐
it's sad that Renoise is often forgotten about :/
well its technically not even a daw
its a tracker
@@Newtinedclose enough it's not like there's a hard definition
I mean Renoise isn't that common nowadays at least. If you got 100 producers together it is unlikely that you'd fine someone who uses Renoise as their main driver.
The renoise disrespect is real. Been rolling with it since 2020.
Proud FL Studio user here!
ew
The entire COD WWII soundtrack was made in a single reaper session, give it some credit!
I don’t think you got Cakewalk right. I remember using Cakewalk in the 90s, before Sonar was a thing.
Yoooo acid pro was actually mentioned! Me and all 9 other users are elated to be included!
FL Studio 4 Life....
Acid and Samplitude are still going? I learned something new today.
I remember when i started using Tracktion waveform, i instantly loved it. Now it is my go to daw. Just something random I want to put out
I'd also say Reaper is very popular among bedroom metal musicians! I use FL Studio for anything that involves midi programming and Reaper for mixing stems and testing out guitar plugins
The audacity of this man to not mention audacity is seriously piss me off 😢
i 1000% thought this was gonna be way more of a joke as a ableton user trashing on other daws is my bread and butter just because all producers trash each other as a joke whenever they be using different daws , Good looks giving the peoples actually quality info keep it up my dude u should do this for digital synths
1:31 but bandlab did feature Bring Me The Horizon in a conference....they played "Can You Feel My Heart"
Bandlab has a few hit songs romantic homicide is one
I'm surprised and impressed someone actually mentioned samplitude/sequoia
I use LMMS and Audacity
FINALLY a normal human being! :D
No ASIO support for LMMS though 😔
As someone that used caustic 3 for 6 years. I miss you homie
You're missing ardour
Open-Source gang🗣️🗣️🔥
"reaper hasn't been used for major commercial hits" Lorna shore, Tallah, The Plot In You, etc lol
Fun Fact. Cubase a really popular DAW in Japan and is used by most home producers and is used in studios along with Pro Tools and Ableton! It got really popular in Japan in the late 2000s due to its compatibility with Vocal Synth software around the time of the rise of Hatsune Miku
Awsome video! Also Logic Pro Gang 🤙🏻
Loving, 11.01
fun fact: garageband is also developped by apple alongside logic pro, so in a way, logic pro is garage band professioanl edition (there is also a similar thing with iMovie and Final Cut Pro)
i jump between fl studio, openmpt, LMMS, and vocaloid/utau/vsynth my first daw was garageband and then I switched to bandlabs and then fl studio, did you know camellia uses reaper, have you seen his screenshots??? he needs like 128 gb lol. for other composers, I've heard that ZUN uses cubase.
Why u skipped MarioPaint
Hahahhaah
2:10 as an fl studio user who makes EDM, this was the most demotivating sentence ive ever heard
I've been using FL Studio since 2009 and I've loved it ever since
No way bro forgot the GOAT online sequencer
2:24 cube base
Can’t believe u didn’t include Studio One. That’s a big one
Bandlab mentioned🗣️💯🔥
0:32 next time say Porter Robinson
Excellent video! But DAWs like LMMS and Zrythm are missing here.
Can you please make another one only for the free DAWs?
Include Zrythm also, please!
(It's a new DAW, currently in beta. Available for windows, Linux, and MacOS.)
Thanks in advance!
Traction waveform mentioned
missed the opportunity to talk about trackers, make a part 2 now
yes
lazerdim makes all his music on bandlab ion wanna hear no major hits this mf got 11 million streams on a song with no vocal mixing 😭
Why is soundtrap, Audacity and N Track left out
And LinuxMultiMediaStudio LMMS: I used it together with Audacity for several years before going back to self-written software and Audacity for mixing&mastering.
Fire vid bro ❤ fl studio and ableton live on top
you chapter 5 elicopte
No lmms damn 😢
Skillrex 🥵, awesome video tho
Cubase isn't just for scoring, it's also used by a lot of big electronic artists too
went from fl mobile (2018-2020) to fl studio (few months) to abelton and I dont think I'll be changing anytime soon cuz I dont see any reason to do so
These are my favorite workstation suits.
I've literally never heard of samplitude in my life
I think artist and their creativity is more important than any DAW.
Thanks man 👍🏼
He forgot Caustic and LMMS 😔
Whers is mixcraft?
whats the name of the first song? It's soooo good, I've heard it in the past, but never knew the name of it. And i can't find it on the channel of roccowchiptune
0:48 as a GarageBand producer, I appreciate that you didn't roast GarageBand
Oh you mean a watered down Logic Pro, right?
@@DSZI.ShyHunterBB you could say that, but we find ways to turn a piece of junk into a working machine
Cool edit
It makes sense Fairlight in Davinci Resolve isn't in this video because if you knew about it, you would've changed the stereo audio track to mono and lowered the audio to a level that doesn't over power your voice. You know, like someone who actually knows enough about DAWs to make this video.
What about jummbox/beepbox, that's also a music maker so why didn't you count that in
Tracktion Waveform
Use renoise
u got straight to the point it scared me 😭😭😭
i've seen a lot of metalheads use reaper for recording their stuff i think
What about chrome music lab?
my left ears loved this video alot
...right ear was jealous tho
idk why
also renoise fans in shambles (not included)
Serato Studio?
Hello, could you make a cooperative mode the same or similar to Resistance 2, please?
First song used is Smashing Windshields from FNAF Pizzeria Simulator, for anyone wondering
Reaper is the best thing for metal
Help me w this! I need to know why. I’m about to do a metal gig and I feel like metal is never mentioned w any DAW… I keep imagining that metal is still an analog thing-which is totally delusional of me.
@@jeremevr6 metal is not that different from any other genre, really. I would recommend watching nail the mix youtube videos or siging up for nail the mix. I think the things you have to master for metal is how gating and saturation works. Plus how to make everything in a mix works so you're able to hear everything and how to queue certain parts so they stick out, because if you're not careful about mixing and emgineering then some things can get buried in it. This stuff is like a puzzle. Like i said though, metal isn't that much different from learning to mix and engineer other genres. I have no clue how to do live gigs though. I'm just a bedroom musician lol. I would also recommend hanging around people that are in this feild too. Careful how much you spend too because a lot can get pricy despite the fact that there's a lot of great free stuff out there. Hopefully something in this wall of text helps. Best of luck on your journey.