Average Reviews:
(More customer reviews)I've been spoiled by FL Studio 5.0 and my demo copy of Project 5. A friend of mine was going to let go of his copy of Sonar 4 because he just bought Sonar 5. But he hasn't gotten around to it yet, and in my impatience I ventured into the software aisle of Comp USA looking for an inexpensive tool that I could use to automate the VST control interface of FL Studio while I lay down some audio tracks. I came across Magix Music Studio 10 Deluxe. By the looks of the screenshots and the promises on the box, as well as what few reviews I've found on the product, I decided to give it a shot.
I loaded it up and quickly discovered, however, that this kludge of a product had been literally sawed in two. The audio multi-track recording environment is one environment, while the MIDI and VSTi/DXi multi-track recording environment is a COMPLETELY SEPERATE PROGRAM!! Can you believe it? Yes, you can record audio, by loading WAV files but possibly in realtime also, within the MIDI recording environment. But all those nifty audio effects must be loaded up into the seperate program.
To make things worse, there does not appear to be a way to specify the default MIDI output device, so the MIDI Out on my MIDI controller is being used as the default device for MIDI playback because it's the first thing it finds. And if THAT wasn't bad enough, trying to use ASIO doesn't work for me because the ASIO drivers keep giving me messageboxes saying "cannot use clock rate of 44khz" or whatever. (I guess this is because my sound card--an Audigy--is set up for 48kHz.)
And if you're like me, you'll throw up over your computer monitor when you see the remnants of an 80's/90's-looking user interface filling up half of the product's windows. It still uses pixellated two-color toolbar icons that remind me of the days of System 6.x on the Macintosh.
I have not done enough tinkering to give it a full evaluation, right now I'm still recovering from the shock factor of how utterly useless this thing is. I should have gone with Sonar 4 Home Studio on the rack there, or Cakewalk Music Creator, or drove over to Guitar Center to pick up Cubase SE, or something, anything other than this.
Heck, the Voyetra offering looked to be better than this.
Click Here to see more reviews about: Magix Music Studio 10 Deluxe
Product Description:
Music Studio 10 Deluxe s for the true music lovers who want to experiemnt with sounds at home. It creates MP3s and other formats, converts them and lets you edit and alter it until you have a whole new composition. It's easy-to-use software that with a huge functional range for anymusician, from beginner to expert. Use the Magix LiViD virtual drummer, for digital percussion with human performance qualities New ringtone generator lets you export your own sounds to common cellular phone audio formats 24-bit playback and processing, plus native support of the high-resolution 24-bit sample format throughout 3,000 new loops, samples, effect presets and video clips Burn data to a DVD, archiving your entire sound library Work with professional effects like Chorus, Flanger, Modulated Filter and Delay Updated Task Assistant for help with common tasks & with making videos Wider range of remix functions, including EQs and insert effects Magix Remix Maker for extended remix automation Optimized start and end marker handling for faster arrangements Expanded MIDI editor for more intuitive MIDI handling and arranging Low Latency offers fast response for real-time recording and live audio inputs
Want to read more honest consumer review about Magix Music Studio 10 Deluxe now ?
No comments:
Post a Comment