When I was a kid there has been this software called Ejay which was very similar to this. You just had a big collection of loops which were selected so that they matched each other harmonically and it had a timeline where you could put them together like in a daw. Didn’t have any midi or effects tho. But it was waaaay back in early 2000s I guess.
Dance Ejay also allowed composing your own melodies and beats. So already 10x better than this. I did my first couple of tracks on it before switching to FL, and honestly, Ejay's not that bad for a kids first DAW.
@@spectralisation It was first for me! To be honest, I don't remember notes input there, but probably I was too young to dig deeper. Btw, I had a similar path: Ejay -> some tracker -> FL -> Reason -> Cubase -> Ableton Live. What a ride :D
@@5t3w When I use samples I usually add a significant amount of My own stuff to it, however there has been times where I just put a pre made drum loop onto a selected sample and it sounded fire so I didn't do much eles. However that is a skill to find that perfect sample for a drum break that just works so so well.
If this was just marketed at getting kids into learning music production it would be cool, but their website seems to actually be marketing it as something anyone can use to make "incredible-sounding music" (their words). Big doubt.
real talk, i bet if a legit producer took the time to learn how to really use output creator inside and out, they could create something fucking sick. the sounds actually seem to be there. with some flashy arrangement techniques, you could create something hype that i bet a non-producer would vibe to.
"this thing isnt gonna crash" yo i spent 700 some odd dollars for 11 suite and yeah it crashes more often than it should for not having an fl style autosaver.
i don't ever trust those highly HD designs in ui's. makes me thing they spent to much time on art then the plugins. may just be me. *unless its a visualizer to see whats going on then whats the point
@@txkyoaes5743Yeah.. and then export it to ableton. To be honest, I think this is will work well as an isolated space outside of a daw because your not constantly thinking about compression, eq'ing or getting everything perfect. This could be focusing on creating a sample or song elements only and then you can structure it all later in ableton.
When I was a kid there has been this software called Ejay which was very similar to this. You just had a big collection of loops which were selected so that they matched each other harmonically and it had a timeline where you could put them together like in a daw. Didn’t have any midi or effects tho.
But it was waaaay back in early 2000s I guess.
Dance Ejay also allowed composing your own melodies and beats. So already 10x better than this. I did my first couple of tracks on it before switching to FL, and honestly, Ejay's not that bad for a kids first DAW.
@@spectralisation It was first for me! To be honest, I don't remember notes input there, but probably I was too young to dig deeper.
Btw, I had a similar path: Ejay -> some tracker -> FL -> Reason -> Cubase -> Ableton Live. What a ride :D
KEEP IT MOVIN GOTTA KEEP IT MOVEE-HAH
Lovin' that "Teenage Engineering Yellow" background. I guess I'll have to switch from FL, this is just sick.
2:58 dude, that track sounds like when you're stuck in three dot anxiety after you confess your love to some in a trxt.
This is hilarious 😂 thank you for reviewing this
A new way to Copy Paste Produce lol. Seriously this could be a good way to start an idea so long as it allows You to move it to a DAW to finish it.
Basically what XO is for.
@@JoelLinus It could have its uses.
I like it for for hip hop/pop, it creates more options for resample loops.
But you technically still make the resampled beat 🤷🏻♂️
@@5t3w When I use samples I usually add a significant amount of My own stuff to it, however there has been times where I just put a pre made drum loop onto a selected sample and it sounded fire so I didn't do much eles. However that is a skill to find that perfect sample for a drum break that just works so so well.
sidechain????? but kenny beats told me i dont HAVE to sidechain!!!!
Is copy pasting splice loops on a actual DAW that hard that newbies would really get into this?
according to Output's market research.
Output has 2 great FX plugins, 1 ok FX plugin, some kontakt libraries, and a bunch of stuff that makes me scratch my head.
0:06 nice song name bro. Clearly a man of culture
If this was just marketed at getting kids into learning music production it would be cool, but their website seems to actually be marketing it as something anyone can use to make "incredible-sounding music" (their words). Big doubt.
whats funny is, some of this sounded better than what you have on this channel that users submit lol.
Did anyone else get the Output Arcade ad before this video started?
It's like the Guitar Hero of DAWs.
Not enough OTT
Needs more nos
real talk, i bet if a legit producer took the time to learn how to really use output creator inside and out, they could create something fucking sick. the sounds actually seem to be there. with some flashy arrangement techniques, you could create something hype that i bet a non-producer would vibe to.
"this thing isnt gonna crash" yo i spent 700 some odd dollars for 11 suite and yeah it crashes more often than it should for not having an fl style autosaver.
Color by numbers for music
🔥🔥🔥 beat
i don't ever trust those highly HD designs in ui's.
makes me thing they spent to much time on art then the plugins.
may just be me.
*unless its a visualizer to see whats going on then whats the point
The art is just something they pay to have made by a graphic design service.
💀💀💀
Come back Ejay.. All is forgiven!!
Just like Palworld...
dont let him get away with saying that
Arcade sucks people actually pay for that garbage too
Tom McDonald… why not 🤷♂️
I don't kno bro.
First 2 songs you did on there was nice...
Might not want to rush to judgment..
He ain’t do any song making though he just clicked and dragged samples and wasn’t really able to uniquely modify them besides chopping them up
@@txkyoaes5743Yeah.. and then export it to ableton.
To be honest, I think this is will work well as an isolated space outside of a daw because your not constantly thinking about compression, eq'ing or getting everything perfect.
This could be focusing on creating a sample or song elements only and then you can structure it all later in ableton.
Great Value Arcade ;)
It's got nothing on eJay.