One thing I really have liked about Protools is that it forces you to understand certain concepts - one is metering, for example. Some things I've really liked about Protools: So - thoughts on this? Why might I want to prefer Protools over Logic in my case? Why? In my case I am recording real instruments in my home studio, mostly mic'd up amps and vocals (albeit with fx and various vsts here and there) - my MIDI doesn't really go beyond drums at this point.įor someone who is NOT using it for electronic music I was looking for some sage advice for someone who wants to use ONE DAW as a composition tool that can later be used to produced finished tracks. My question is: The comparisons I always read are about Logic is better for creating and protools is better for recording are written from the perspective almost always of people who are making electronic music. I consider myself a beginner with these programs but they are both pretty easy to use - I am pretty technical so I find all the stuff that Logic might do automatically like busing and all that pretty easy and straight forward. Logic is better at MIDI (I don't see why this is true but people say it Protools Midi seems pretty much there as far as I can tell - I DO NOT however (as I will note later) do tons of stuff you'd see in electronic music like arpeggiators and all that business so I might be blind to some shortcomings). I've been learning both sort of side by side and in reading about it I hear sort of the same arguments about Protools vs Logic - which to summarize: Hi there! I was hoping someone could weigh in on this that perhaps has experience with both Logic and Protools.
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