![]() ![]() ![]() So we pretty much have Steinberg to thank for the shape of the DAW that we use today, and for the instruments within it. Audio recording was introduced and then Steinberg invented the virtual instrument – okay, it did exist before, but you can easily argue that the Hamburg-based company brought it to the masses with the Virtual Studio Technology (VST) standard. Since then, Steinberg has hardly rested on its laurels. It was MIDI only back then, but it had note editing, drag-and-drop, copy and paste, duplicating, looping, transport controls, all the basics you Tracktion, Mixcraft, Logic (and far more) owners take for granted now, but this was happening three decades ago, no less. For the first time, you could see the tracks, the notes, the piano-roll editing in a style, it has to be said, that remains to this day on so many modern DAWs (we don’t, of course, call them sequencers any more).Ĭubase v1 arguably laid down the design template for music production for years to come – tracks top to bottom, song left to right – and did it all in glorious greyscale. I say ‘proper’, as I had been sequencing via hardware for a few years at that point, but that was all steps, numbers and symbols on screen – hardly the visual ‘song on a screen’ Cubase portrayed, even back at v1 on an Atari. Steinberg’s Cubase sequencer was my first proper introduction to the world of music technology. VST Connect SE and VST Transit cloud collaboration.Compositional tools include Chord Track, Chord Pads and the Chord Assistant.VariAudio audio tuner for MIDI style editing, harmony and auto-tune effects.MixConsole and integrated high-end channel strip.and MIDI tracks and up to 256 physical inputs and outputs Mac and PC DAW with 32-bit floating-point audio engine up to 192kHz quality and 5.1 surround.Price £480 £51 upgrade from v9 Contact Steinberg Cubase Pro 9.5 key features: ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |