What daw should i use Garageband,Logic,Cubase,Pro Tools ?

Greetings

guys i just bought recently a iMac 27 inch with a decent gpu and processor
i use my Mac for only music production

Software currently using = Garageband & Cubase 7 elements Trial

Is it worth it to move from garageband to Logic? yes or no give me cons and pros…

give me cons and pros about pro tools and cubase.

Recommend me also good plugins for audio production Free or Paid…

I think the real question is not which DAW you should use, but what you aim to do?

All the tools you mentioned are pretty decent for handling samples and virtual instruments, and range from good to bad in terms of handling automation, external instrument management and so on.

However, if Garageband isn’t limiting you, why change? Why upgrade? If it does all you want, anything more is a waste of money and effort.

On the other hand, if you want to move away from the sort of thing Garageband can do for you, you should probably consider Renoise. Renoise is a pointillist’s brush compared to conventional DAWs, and the tracker interface affords you capabilities which other interfaces struggle to provide.

I think the move from Garageband to Logic would be worthwhile if you want to get more from your DAW. It’s an easy transition and the bundled plugins are great, too.

Thanks for letting me know, i am about to purchase Logic later :stuck_out_tongue:

Hi, this is a Renoise forum.

Moving to Renoise…

and also… move to Renoise.

after moving to Renoise.

Did you move to Renoise?

I don’t know if i should bother this but instead of writing nonsense you could’ve helped me like the others… same goes to Neurogami and The Monotreme Goat “just coming by to like some posts but i am not interested in helping this guy”

and besides its offtopic i can discuss anything i like here.You don’t need to post nonsense again because its wasting people’s time including yours.

Ill give my experience with renoise if you stay cool like the others…

Thanks for reading

I think the real question is not which DAW you should use, but what you aim to do?

All the tools you mentioned are pretty decent for handling samples and virtual instruments, and range from good to bad in terms of handling automation, external instrument management and so on.

However, if Garageband isn’t limiting you, why change? Why upgrade? If it does all you want, anything more is a waste of money and effort.

On the other hand, if you want to move away from the sort of thing Garageband can do for you, you should probably consider Renoise. Renoise is a pointillist’s brush compared to conventional DAWs, and the tracker interface affords you capabilities which other interfaces struggle to provide.

Jan very nice written. However i will not consider to use renoise again because its not my style … I am about to purchase logic pro X or Cubase or Pro Tools I will keep you guys updated : D

EDIT what i aim to do is much of midi editing, Score editing

I don’t know if i should bother this but instead of writing nonsense you could’ve helped me like the others… same goes to Neurogami and The Monotreme Goat “just coming by to like some posts but i am not interested in helping this guy”

Theproblemwith your post was that you gave no indication of having done any research on your own, and you offered no explanation of what it is you want to do. Basically, you want other people to look stuff up for you, figure out the pros and cons for you, go though through all the features of amultitudeofsoftware, and put time and effort into solving your problem. Probably more time and effort than you have put in yourself.

And then, to top it off, you get pissy because someone likes a pro-Renoise post on a Renoise forum.

Please get over yourself.

OK, so what happened when you used Renoise?

I grant you, it doesn’t really have sheet music options for score management; for that I use Musescore.

But for MIDI editing, Renoise does a fine job in my opinion. I’ve certainly never found myself unable to do that.

Pros use logic. Cons sell apple.

Renoise is the obvious choice. Doubly so because it will not lock you into an operating system. Now if you want to use a piano roll based, horizontal DAW, and you have been using GarageBand, then Logic is a good pick. You can even load your GB projects.