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reason vs cubase
 

offline Oddioblender from Fort Worth, TX (United States) on 2013-02-06 17:03 [#02448800]
Points: 9601 Status: Lurker



hello, been dead a while and back, figured this old haunt
would be the place to ask.

i've been using freeware for years, mostly brambos stuffs
and recently the old TS-404 and drumsyn software, because
you know, in IDM terms, I live under a rock. That, and my
old Alesis SR-16 died on me so I'm deciding not to be a
grumpy old IDM fart and move on with the march of time.

Ahem.

So, anyways, looking to get a good basic software set under
$200 USD. I've been looking at Reason Essentials (the cheap
one) and Cubase 6 because they're affordable, I hear good
things, and I don't want to dump over $400 on a software
that I may completely hate.

Note: I have a good knowledge of sequencing and synthesis
and can make loops pretty well on my own. I also have some
cheap keyboards at home I can use with an effects processor
for some fun stuff. Regardless, I wanted the community's
opinion. Does anyone have experience/gripes/praises/tips on
either program?

I'm also open to other software suggestions I you have them.
Cheers.


 

offline Spookyluke from United States on 2013-02-06 18:42 [#02448801]
Points: 1955 Status: Lurker



My other suggestion is Reaper-- I think a lifetime license
is $60. There's an unrestricted demo, too, so you can try it
out.

Reason is a lot of fun though... haven't used it since
version 3, I think.

I don't think Reason runs VSTs except for its own
proprietary plugins, so that can be a big downer.

I like Ableton Live a lot, but it's not cheap.


 

offline melack from barcielwave on 2013-02-06 18:45 [#02448802]
Points: 9099 Status: Regular



hi oddioblender, welcome back

i ve been using reason for some years now,
and i must say i really love it...
all my comments relate to the old reason4 version
and also to an old cubase ive not touched for years now.
and from an amateur point of view.

i guess both programs are really different,
id say reason is a more restrictive software,
on soundmachines and fx,
but you can tweak almost everything and get mad with the cv
options, what is fucking addictive and really IDMish.
Reason is also great for live performance with a
controller,
as you can assign anything to any button.

on the other side, cubase is a multitracker for all
purposes,
and allow to include all kind of vst plugins,
so it will allow you go beyond in sound and music styles.
i guess it is great if you want to include recordings and
check different plugins, but it has not the immediate aspect
of reason...

so, id say Reason if you just want to have fun producing
electronic music, and Cubase if you want a more professional
and personalizable set.

The best option would be to combine both, one for producing
beats and synths and whatever, and the other to process and
mix them and add extern things.



 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-02-06 19:24 [#02448805]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



some people like reaper -- cool -- but i don't. its piano
roll is fucking prehensile (or was two years ago, anyways).

if you're an old fart coming out from under a rock after a
long sesh with acid gear, i'd thoroughly say reason is the
'ware for you, despite being a diehard cubase fan meself.

reason is very focused, very all-in-one, and the workflow is
meant to be like plugging a bunch of old boxes together.
only downside is that it can't do nonlinear audio (without
"propellerheads record," anyways, which i've not tried
yet).

cubase is incredibly powerful, it will do more than reason
ever does, but it is also esoteric and complicated and you
will need to get a lot of VSTs before it really cooks.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-02-06 19:30 [#02448806]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



OR!! generate MIDI and noise in ableton; record + clean up
the results in cubase.

BONUS!! get your third computer (you have three, right?) and
run reason on that; control it from ableton via midi, record
massive multitrack recordings to cubase, get them all
pretty, then run them back out through your desk for a
proper analog mixdown, and back into cubase


 

offline larn from PLANET E (United Kingdom) on 2013-02-06 22:17 [#02448824]
Points: 5473 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



reason is like a hardware studio emulator which is fun and
fairly easy to get going with, but i feel that cubase is
better if you are going to be getting more deeper into
programming your music.


 

offline listen2meTalk on 2013-02-06 22:57 [#02448831]
Points: 575 Status: Addict



I think you shouldn't act until wavephace weighs in on this
topic. He's pretty knowledgeable with New Digital Cool.


 

offline Haft from Tublin (Ireland) on 2013-02-06 23:51 [#02448853]
Points: 884 Status: Lurker



Like Melack I'm only versed in Reason 4, but it can do a lot
of very nifty things automation-wise. However, the sampler
is far from optimum, and if you're looking for software to
polish your sound and make it releasable, I find Reason by
itself lacks something in tying off a track for its final
mix.


 

offline AMPI MAX from United Kingdom on 2013-02-06 23:53 [#02448855]
Points: 10789 Status: Regular



reason is tricky but my fav


 

offline Haft from Tublin (Ireland) on 2013-02-07 00:10 [#02448869]
Points: 884 Status: Lurker | Followup to AMPI MAX: #02448855



Mods modding mods modding mods


 

offline wavephace from off the chain on 2013-02-07 02:39 [#02448879]
Points: 3098 Status: Lurker



just follow ur heart


 

offline freqy on 2013-02-07 02:47 [#02448884]
Points: 18724 Status: Regular | Show recordbag




isn't there a demo of both reason and reaper, try em out.

cubase is more industry standard than reaper.

maybe watch lots of youtube tutorial videos first before y
buy.



 

offline listen2meTalk on 2013-02-07 03:00 [#02448888]
Points: 575 Status: Addict



Fruity is pretty powerful. Don't count it out.


 

offline wavephace from off the chain on 2013-02-07 03:01 [#02448890]
Points: 3098 Status: Lurker



whats wrong with what ur doing


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-02-07 03:04 [#02448891]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i am not sure can anyone tell me wat daw was dis


 

offline freqy on 2013-02-07 03:13 [#02448893]
Points: 18724 Status: Regular | Show recordbag





epicscoobysnax, was it treason ?


 

offline freqy on 2013-02-07 03:13 [#02448894]
Points: 18724 Status: Regular | Show recordbag




is that your song?


 

offline jnasato from 777gogogo (Japan) on 2013-02-07 03:47 [#02448904]
Points: 3393 Status: Regular | Show recordbag



Yah- I put in my vote for Reaper, as well. I was using
Logic from 2002 to 2011, and everything I learnt basically
translates over (I imagine Cubase knowledge would transfer,
as well). The great thing about Reaper is that you can
basically start using it right now, because the demo is
unrestricted. Pretty smooth workflow. I give it a 9/10!
If you choose to just use Reaper for free forever, you can
spend your money on some nice plugins.

But my favorite of all time is by far Logic Pro. Absolutely
incredible feature-set, as well as amazing included plugins.
Yah, Reaper is great, but I'm using 100% free plugins (no
pir8 etc), so it's kinda lo-fi grunge lazer.


 

offline larn from PLANET E (United Kingdom) on 2013-02-07 06:08 [#02448920]
Points: 5473 Status: Regular | Followup to jnasato: #02448904 | Show recordbag



I agree about logic pro, that was all i used too


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2013-02-07 09:21 [#02448929]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



Reason is all I use these days. There are no features I want
from a DAW that it lacks (now that it has merged with
Record). The SSL emulation in it is spot on for mixing
within the software itself.


 

offline AMPI MAX from United Kingdom on 2013-02-07 15:47 [#02448942]
Points: 10789 Status: Regular



id say go with reason + reaper. reaper is free and works far
better than cubase ever did imo but maybe i never got the
best out of cubase. i think reaper even let me put a video
on the timeline to sync sound to and it worked so much
better than other shite ive used. you'd prob be perfectly
happy with reaper and some cool vsts


 

offline Torture Garden from Feelin' 2Pacish on 2013-02-07 17:33 [#02448946]
Points: 974 Status: Lurker



another vote for reaper + reason.

you can rewire reason into reaper to use them together.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2013-02-07 21:09 [#02448975]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to Torture Garden: #02448946 | Show recordbag



What's Reaper like for CPU usage? I've often wondered about
finding a very light VST host I could ReWire to in order to
allow me to run VSTs in Reason.


 

offline Torture Garden from Feelin' 2Pacish on 2013-02-07 22:14 [#02448979]
Points: 974 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #02448975



I think Reaper would be a decent choice but I'm not the most
knowledgable about these things tbh.

I've rewired on probably one of the lowest low end laptops
you can imagine and it was just about possible if I didn't
do anything to annoy it. You can customize a really simple
setup on reaper to work the way you would want it to though
and save it as a template for future use. The cool thing is
that it's free to try anyway.


 

offline Oddioblender from Fort Worth, TX (United States) on 2013-02-10 19:34 [#02449199]
Points: 9601 Status: Lurker



wow - great feedback, people. i think i have what i need. i
did not know of reaper, i think I'll try that one out and
someone said there is a demo of reason out there? think i'll
snag that before i make a commitment, but i'm leaning
towards reason and possibly reaper too - i'm liking what I
am hearing. I'll watch vids on cubase before deciding on
that.

thanks, folks!


 

offline fleetmouse from Horny for Truth on 2013-02-10 23:41 [#02449211]
Points: 18042 Status: Lurker | Followup to Ceri JC: #02448975



Reaper is very reasonable on CPU and not resource hungry. Do
try the fully functional non expiring demo.


 

offline detheel on 2013-10-15 00:13 [#02462781]
Points: 240 Status: Addict



Do try the fully functioning non expiring DUBturbo


 


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