![]() ![]() If you're mostly recording, editing, and mixing audio, Reaper might be a better choice although Logic works fine for those tasks as well. If you're doing a lot of electronic music and using virtual instruments, Logic is a great deal since it comes with a big pile of virtual instruments. It really depends on what you want to do. ![]() I would say (having used both Logic and Reaper) that Logic is easier to figure out and many of the tools are simpler to use, although Reaper has more features and is more customizeable (and of course it's cross-platform so you aren't limited to using it on a Mac). If you're looking at options, Reaper is definitely a good one but if you're new to DAWs it'll be very intimidating unless you spend time watching the really excellent free video training series by Kenny Gioia (on the Reaper website). LMMS is another, which is free, but maybe trickier. Many people suggest Reaper is a worthwhile one to try and not to expensive. ![]() Now I'm looking for a decent DAW to play with - and Garageband just doesn't seem to tick the boxes, yet I don't want to lash out for Logic Pro X in the hope that it might be better. There are other good video tools, some free, some not - but some are really very different in the way they work. Perhaps it takes a while to get used to, but it does the job. That may not be a limitation of Logic Pro X, but without a trial version to test it's not worth taking the risk.įinal Cut Pro X does have a trial - which really is free, though I ended up buying it anyway. A major limitation is not being able to export Midi files. If it is, it's not good enough to entice serious people to use the "real" thing. They do its called GarageBand and its already on your Mac, same thing without the full blown mixer and more bells and whistleNo - GarageBand is perhaps not just a trial version. ![]()
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