Er... uh... yeah. Then there IS that, too.Frodo wrote:"Mama, don't take my Kodachrome away"Shooshie wrote:But I am guilty of putting printers out of business with my laserwriter, accountants out of business with my spreadsheets and tax software, and photographers out of business with Photoshop. Heck, I've even put Kodak out of business with my digital camera! Kodak! My favorite film company. Makers of Kodachrome!
Shooshie
~ Paul Simon
Yes, and we DAW users have taken a slice out of the recording studio market as well as the CD repro market. There was a day when we had no choice but to find a cheap studio and then send our mixes out to some company for duplication.
Enter the personal computer and home production studio. Give me a beat-- thwack. A touch of guitar and piano-- twang. "I'm gonna add some bottom so that dancers just won't hide"-- oomph. A touch of reverb and compression-- thwonk.

It's interesting to me, but I saw this coming over 20 years ago, and at the peak of my concert career, I started doing MIDI music. I gave all that up for this. I believed that music would become somewhat like sculpture, and that we musicians who learned this wonderful craft would be able to make amazing things with it. This was the future of music, I thought. So, I jumped into it. I was a little ahead of my time. Only now, 22 years later, are we actually able to make realistic sounding music that rivals the "real thing." But in the process, I've learned so much, and it's taken me so many places. I think my concert career would have ended up largely in academia. I think I made the right choice. What I'm saying is that I did what the smart printers, accountants, photographers, illustrators, and many others did: rather than resist the new technology, I embraced it and tried to make it mine. Doing that as kept me current and active in the professional music world.
I think that the kind of music that Logic's website demos encourage is not necessarily what I set out to do, but I think it is unavoidable to embrace it, too. I don't know where it leads, nor did I know where Performer/Digital Performer would lead. But I'm glad I set out on this path, and now I think it's important to come to an understanding of Logic and loop composition. It's not how I trained, but it's an efficient and fast way to create something of commercial value. I know I'm preaching to the choir. Most of you have already done that, and probably do it very well. I'm the one who simply has avoided loops and mechanized composition.
Don't worry; I'm not about to give up what I've got in DP. I'm just going to add to it. Maybe not right away--I've got too much on my plate at the moment, and I've got to go to Las Vegas for a few weeks to do some work. (in DP, of course) But I'm very interested in giving Logic a try.
Can someone tell me if the limited version (which is much cheaper) is too limited for comfort?
Shooshie