Budget-friendly, but still bursting with professional features! Turn your PC into a complete music production studio. Record instruments and vocals and mix them with studio-quality audio effects. Edit audio, MIDI, and music notation.
Build backing tracks or entire songs with hundreds of included instrument sounds and tempo-syncing loops. Boasts the core features of SONAR with a quick-start guide, track presets, project templates, and video tutorials to make getting started easy. Sleek, customizable interface; updated mixing console; lots of effects; automated tracks, effects, instruments, and mix control; realtime MIDI quantize; freeze function; native VST support; easy-to-use sampler with sounds; and internet music-sharing tools.
Also built to be compatible with Microsoft Windows Vista. Easy as plug-n-play Recording any instrument is easy. Just plug in, check your levels, and hit record. Confidence Recording will draw the audio on screen as you record so you know you're getting the take. Hear internal effects on input, even while you record.
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If you need help getting a project started, use Track Presets for access to hundreds of sounds that will help ignite your creativity. Once you have recorded your tracks, you can visually arrange, edit, and mix your music with point-and-click ease”all in one view. Create backing tracks fast Create backing tracks in a matter of seconds. Find the perfect loop or sample in DropZone or the Loop Explorer, then click and drag it to start building your arrangement.
You can chop up your beats, add dynamics, and create remixes with just a few clicks of the mouse. The enhanced Loop Construction View allows you to take control of your loops”tweak the pitch, pan, and gain of slices in any ACID-format loop.
Edit with powerful tools Edit and arrange audio and MIDI together in one view with simple tools that give powerful results. Zoom in and make pinpoint edits to your project. Change the tempo and pitch; normalize or reverse the audio; preview, move, extend, or cut certain sections; add track envelopes. Use many of the same powerful features found in SONAR Producer Edition including multi-clip edits, loop-rolling, fade drawing, and more. And with SONAR Home Studio 6 you can feel free to experiment with non-destructive editing and unlimited undo/redo. Mix and share your music Mixing in SONAR Home Studio 6 is easy with Track Icons”no more guessing which track contains guitar or which track has the vocals.
Mute, Solo, Pan, and change the Gain all in one view to achieve the best mix. Add effects to your mix and A/B them with just a click of a button. Professional metering provides the visual feedback you need for better real-time mixing. Mix in a more traditional studio console view or use your own control surface hardware to get the feel of real knobs and faders.
XL features Home Studio XL 6 Introduces Cakewalk Publisher, a new tool that helps users publish and present their music online. Cakewalk Publisher allows SONAR Home Studio customers to create a customized, online, Streaming music player with playlists of their music that can then be directly uploaded from SONAR Home Studio to band websites, MySpace pages, and other Internet sites. Cakewalk SONAR Home Studio 6 XL recording software features several new features, such as Active Controller Technology, new effects and instruments, and new tools for publishing music online.
Designed for compatibility with the Windows Vista operating system and based on the updated SONAR 6.2 professional recording software, the Cakewalk SONAR Home Studio 6 package gives you a powerful and affordable platform to use on your Vista system. SONAR Home Studio XL adds over one gigabyte of instrument sounds, a maximizer/limiter, Dimension LE and Session Drummer 2. Boost 11 Peak Limiter Get more volume and punch from your final mix with this easy to use peak limiter/maximizer. Boost 11 gives you professional results with a simple to use interface. Dimension LE A special version of the acclaimed synth from Cakewalk.
Features over 400 sound programs, ranging from real bass, organ and electric piano samples to cutting-edge synth sounds and rhythmic grooves. Garritan Pocket Orchestra Expands Dimension LE with more instrument sounds from the leader in orchestral soundware. Add pristine string sections, brass, woodwinds, and orchestral percussion to your compositions. Session Drummer 2 Create the perfect drum track for any project. Build a foundation for your song with Session Drummer 2's customizable drum kits.
Play drums or trigger built in live-feel patterns from your MIDI controller for ultimate control. HS6XL has many of the features and sound quality capabilities of other higher end DAWs. The XL package provides some decent plug-ins and HS6 is host friendly for most other plug-ins and re-wire devices. Expansion possibilities are pretty much unlimited.For desired results, a sound card specifically designed for recording is necessary (stay away from Sound Blasters, etc). With a decent audio interface and MIDI keyboard, I've put some nice stuff together. My first experience with DAWs was in a friends studio that uses Pro Tools and high end hardware.
Cakewalk Sonar 2 Remove Vocal
There is no 'naked ear' difference between the work I did with him and the work I'm doing at home with HS6XL.Cakewalk offers lots of discounted upgrades and plug-in package sales for registered owners. The Cakewalk users forum is second to none. Get on the Cakewalk Bandwagon. I rated this product keeping in mind a couple of minor points. FIRST, that comparing it to a fully blown DAW would be idiotic so I looked at it from the value for your money and capability point of view. SECOND, that the computer I have it installed on is not a dedicated (to recording) system.
Cakewalk Sonar 2 Producer Air
This means I could more likely than naught improve the situation with either a dedicated computer or a better sound card (an option under consideration to be sure). I purchased the program and found I needed to spend additional money for an MP3 Converter (One of the reasons I got it was for that capability) which didn't make me real happy. The program seems to function well, and the plug ins and the built in manager are not bad.
It is taking me a while to explore and get used to but at least there won't be the annual update hassle the other system I had gave me. The documentation and tutorials are clear and concise with examples that led me through all of the areas I needed to see, and the help function works great as well. The resultant output from the program has thus far been more that I expected.As long as you keep things in perspective (it is not a program costing thousands of dollars but rather a home system to help most of us record) and look at similar programs in the price range as references, I don't think you will be disappointed.
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I have decided to get into the 'Firewire' based recording and want to know what everyone's opinion is. Should I go with the Digi 002 with protools LE (at a sticker price of 2200) OR go with the new (1200 sticker price) with Cakewalk Sonar XL? I already have Cakewalk and I am pretty cool with using it. But everyone that I talk to about comparing the two only can tell me that protools is the industry standard.
I know that, but what are the reasons I should spend 1000 bucks more to get it??? What can protools do that Cakewalk can't??? I am running a Dual P4 2.4ghz system, with a gig of ram. I am running XP, so I don't think that my computer will care either way. Could someone please just shoot me a quick message just telling me the basic pro's and con's of both??? I understand that most of today's pro studios are using protools, but more and more are getting cakewalk. I know that the studio that I work with has both, so I really don't see portability to the studio a problem.
Any help would be great. Thanks a bunch. Originally posted by Fusion2 well, with protools, you have protools, and it's console, with a generic digital console you have any soft you want, mostly, but i'm not sure if protools soft is all that can run on there console? Someone help me out here.so I really don't see portability to the studio a problem.??
I don't think you'll be lugging around the protools console, it's pretty beefy from the looks of it, imho that is. Less your protech 'on the road'. Look at the Digi002. If that is what you call beefy. I am not talking about a full on HD setup or a Studio 24.
Just the small 002. I am really looking for the pros and cons of the software.
The hardware is a no question. Tascam's is better all around. Other than it says tascam and not digidesign. That is what I am beginning to realize. The extra 1000 that I would sink into the digi002 is just for the name. A friend had a great idea, get (Sub 300 on ebay) and use that just when I HAVE to port something into Protools. And I think that is what I am going to end up doing.
Cakewalk Sonar 2 Producer Air
Little round a bout way, but it'll work for me, and I am still 700 bucks ahead. Can we say new Mic??? Thanks for the opinion. I would think that if you are into MIDI at all you would want to stick with Sonar. If you are strictly audio only it is a toss up of features, ease of use and 'wow factor' of saying you are using Protools. I personally don't like Sonar for audio only recording.
I have used every incarnation of the Cakewalk products from about 3.0 on up to Sonar 1.1 and liked it for the MIDI features but always was disappointed with the audio hiccups. There are other programs out there that are much better for audio only. Samplitude blows the pants off both Cakewalk AND Protools in my humble opinion. I am sure there are those that disagree.
I recently re-installed windows XP pro and dl'd all of the updates. When I try to install Sonar XL 2.0 it tells me that it 'doesn't detect directX ver. 8.1' and it is going to install it.then re-boot the system and then install sonar after reboot.
But after re-boot the program does load.it just intalls directx 8.1 with the same message to reboot again.and again.and again. You get the picture. It never recognizes that i just installed directx 8.1. Well, the problem is that after dl'ing the win updates i now have directX 9.
I have tried to install sonar a bunch of times and nothings doing. I tried a few things to no avail. It's like because i have directX 9 the program never sees 8.1 and the cpu doens't want to use 8.1 because of the updated version. Anybody else run into this.better yet.anybody know how i can get my shiet to work again??? Thanks everybody!
Originally posted by Sultan5000 The above works, but this may be easier. Select START then RUN then enter REGEDIT and press enter: In the dir struc to the left browse to HKEYLOCALMACHINE/SOFTWARE/MICROSOFT/DIRECTX Change value to 4. Essentially, this tricks the system into thinking it has ver 4.08. Then the new version will run fine! Sultan, Using the Cakewalk method would be the preferred. Making that change might effect other programs that use DirectX, I can't confirm this, but say one needs DirectX 9 and the reg says it version 4. Just a thought, Porter.
Reinstalling Sonar 2 XL Hello:D! I have a problem regarding reinstallation of Sonar 2.
I've recently bought a E-mu 1616m soundcard witch came with Sonar 4 LE. Before installing Sonar LE i uninstalled Sonar 2, but now I would like to reinstall.
I use Cakewalk's DirectXUtility to install Sonar 2 XL from the original CD, but then, when I try to apply the 2.1 and 2.2 updates, they inform me that Sonar is not present or not correctly installed on my system! I've tried several attempts to uninstall and reinstall without success! Is this also a known problem with DirectX? Can MicroSoft AntiSpyware be the problem (tried to deactivate during install to no avail)? Any suggestion?
One more question. Will at some point the Sonar 4.0.2, 4.0.3 and 4.0.4 updates be available for us LE users?