Bren Gun wrote:Hi all. As I am thinking of using DP8, I have some questions.
Bren Gun wrote:
3. If one uses a DAW all-round (for example, for orchestral music composition (using samples), music notation, non-orchestral music composition, recording, audio editing, sound design, mixing and mastering, etc.), is DP8 a good choice?
(Please don't respond by including the mention of other dedicated music notation software, because it's irrelevant. I want to be able to work as much as possible in one DAW.)
By placing those restrictions on the answer, you forbid us from telling the truth. DP is simply one of the best DAWs on the market. The experience of the developers, plus the frame of mind behind the designers of Performer and later Digital Performer has always been the sort that appeals to professionals more than amateurs. It's simply a treat to use DP most of the time. My forte was always creating music in MIDI. DP offers the most musical editing features of any DAW that I know of. You will find that most people who think they know DP do not really know these features or why they make DP so great. That's due to the limitations of your typical composer in MIDI. I'm saying that most of the users in this forum are atypical, they know the depths that your typical user never achieves. Knowing all the features, commands, and workflow techniques that DP can offer gives you infinite possibilities.
There are two notation environments. One is called Quickscribe, and is more of a score-engraving app within DP. As a score engraving app, I'd give Quickscribe a grade of about a B, maybe a B-Minus. It's no Finale or Sibelius, though it does have a pretty good transcription engine for converting your MIDI to notation.
The other is the Notation Editor. Think of it more like the piano roll editor for a single track, only it's in notation. It can be displayed right between MIDI tracks or audio tracks. Fits right in with the measures aligned in the Consolidated Window. Excellent mode of editing.
But if you are going to work in notation, you've got to convert a freestyle MIDI performance into a metered MIDI display with barlines where they belong. DP's method for doing that is the best I've seen. Basically, you tap the beats as it plays your sequence, then you go back and adjust beats manually. When adjusting, it can snap those beats right to a grid so that the display is perfectly rendered. The performance remains free and unquantized, but the display appears to be perfect quarter notes, half notes, 8th note, 16ths, etc. The way that works, of course, is that DP calculates the tempo changes for each fraction of a note so that the notes will appear in perfect notation even though the time is all over the place from the live performance. All DAWs can do this, I think, but not necessarily with the ease and consistency with which DP does it.
Dp also is amazing for recording and editing audio, incorporating brilliant take-comping, intonation editing, splicing, and audio manipulation. My current project is audio only -- no MIDI involved -- and each day I feel like pinching myself to be sure I'm not dreaming. It makes audio so EASY! (and so beautiful)
There is much more to the total package than matching feature-for-feature what you're accustomed to. You've got to let go and try DP's way. There's a reason why so many people love this app so much that they continue to use it even when it's more fashionable to use something else.
Bren Gun wrote:
4. How smooth and good is the combination of MIDI editing and music notation? (for example, can one see a Piano Roll View, Music Notation View, and MIDI Controller View in one good view synchronized with each other? Is this view, if existent, customizable, for instance, by removing a part from the view?)
See the above paragraphs for the answer, but to summarize, YES and YES.
Bren Gun wrote:5. Is Windows XP not supported at all?
Extra question: if not supported, why?
That's a question for MOTU. You should call them. Tech Support: 617-576-3066. This forum, btw, is not a part of MOTU.
Bren Gun wrote:6. Is it possible to properly burn Audio CDs (for instance finished albums) from within DP8?
Yes, but I prefer to use Waveburner. There are other mastering apps that may even be better, but I happen to love Waveburner, plus it came with Logic 8 Studio, so I have it.
Bren Gun wrote:7. As I recall reading something about DP8 and Snap to Grid which may be problematic, what is there to know about this matter?
(Often enough I wish to arrange audio and MIDI clips according to some grid. This is a basic need and there should be a basic or better-than-basic provision to satisfy it.)
I know of no such problem.
Perhaps someone was referring to the way DP handles regions, which is completely unlike Logic. DP's is my preferred method, but there are enough people asking for something similar to Logic, that I'm suggesting to MOTU that they add a basic region function that treats an entire MIDI phrase, section, or song as a single region to be moved as a single object.
It's so easy to do that without having to glue it together as an object, that I see no reason for it. I actually feel terribly encumbered in Logic for that very reason. DP leaves you free to make your selection choices as you see fit, and gives you many ways to do so. I dare say that I work as fast or faster in MIDI than most people in Logic. It's a matter of knowing many ways to select, retain a selection, remember a selection, and so forth. DP is blessed with lots of tools for this.
Again, don't assume that working the same way that something works in Logic or Cubase is actually a plus. Maybe some of us have methods that would make you envious.
Bren Gun wrote:8. Why is there no demo?
Honestly, I don't know. There is a reduced-feature, audio-only version of DP called AudioDesk, which comes for free in some of MOTU's hardware devices, such as their PCI-424 based audio interfaces, or Firewire interfaces.
Bren Gun wrote:Have a good day, all!
Thank you, and same to you.
Shooshie