Do I need a 2-track editor?...
Posted: Tue Nov 11, 2014 3:25 pm
Hello Everyone,
I am in the process of putting my old programs onto a new machine and I am coming to a sticking point with BIAS Peak... I used to use it quite a bit before it died. Then mostly just used it for splitting up long cassette/vinyl sides into individual tracks (which worked great). However, I am not sure I want to put an EOL program on my machine...
Now, I am asking myself if I want to perhaps look into another 2-track editor, or perhaps just try and see if DP can do the job for me. I ask, because I do like the clear simplicity of a 2-track editors' lay-out (I really liked Peaks' lay out, but oh well...).
I am wondering how many of you are doing professional mastering work for clients with regards to a finished CD to be duplicated (DDP creation, etc)? Can technically DP do everything I need? If not, which is the best dedicated 2-track editor for a Mac (Besides DSP Quatro)?
I have asked this on another forum (http://prorecordingworkshop.lefora.com/ ... GKZT4epqG8) and am slightly overwhelmed by the options and wanted to see what some of you might have experienced. A good summary of what was mentioned:
What do you guys think?
Thanks for any help/insight, I appreciate it.
~Shea
I am in the process of putting my old programs onto a new machine and I am coming to a sticking point with BIAS Peak... I used to use it quite a bit before it died. Then mostly just used it for splitting up long cassette/vinyl sides into individual tracks (which worked great). However, I am not sure I want to put an EOL program on my machine...
Now, I am asking myself if I want to perhaps look into another 2-track editor, or perhaps just try and see if DP can do the job for me. I ask, because I do like the clear simplicity of a 2-track editors' lay-out (I really liked Peaks' lay out, but oh well...).
I am wondering how many of you are doing professional mastering work for clients with regards to a finished CD to be duplicated (DDP creation, etc)? Can technically DP do everything I need? If not, which is the best dedicated 2-track editor for a Mac (Besides DSP Quatro)?
I have asked this on another forum (http://prorecordingworkshop.lefora.com/ ... GKZT4epqG8) and am slightly overwhelmed by the options and wanted to see what some of you might have experienced. A good summary of what was mentioned:
Oh, and TwistedWave. Forgot that one.
To answer your question:
Audacity - Surprisingly capable for a free app. Broad plug-in support, including AU and VST.
Triumph - In the what-it-costs-for-what-it-does category, this is a high-value app. AU plug-in support.
LoudLAB - Haven't tried it. Reasonable price and interesting feature set but no plug-in support.
TwistedWave - Haven't tried it, but looks competitive with Triumph. Interface looks familiar, like Peak or DSP Quattro which is nice. Supports both AU and VST plug-ins.
Sound Forge 2 - Haven't tried it. Gets very mixed user ratings. Some say it's really bad, some say it's great. Probabaly depends on your workflow. Supports AU and VST plug-ins.
WaveLab - Very capable app used by pros and ME's. VST-only plug-in support.
soundBlade - Another very capable app used by pros and ME's. Supports both AU and VST plug-ins.
And DSP Quattro? Sounds like you tried that one. Venerable but in need of an update. The word on the street is the publisher is working on a major update, sure to support 64-bit. Losing BIAS was a bummer but I wouldn't hesitate to install and update Peak on a new system. afaik, it doesn't install any kernel extensions or plug-ins so it shouldn't destabilize the system in any way. I still doink around with Soundtrack Pro sometimes myself... Hope this helps.
What do you guys think?
Thanks for any help/insight, I appreciate it.
~Shea