This DAW has been the beating heart and soul of professional studios since the humble beginnings of computer based recording and with good reason. If you’re making a list of DAWs of any kind in this century, leaving out Pro Tools would be a blunder only the elitist of hipsters would make. The free version is out there, why not give it a whirl? Pro Tools With tight integration for the latest PreSonus audio interfaces, Studio one is most definitely worth a try. Think of a streamlined ‘sibelius plug-in’ type system, all built into a contextual menu. PreSonus has also implemented a fantastic individual note-editing paradigm that lets you process notes in a really robust way. There is an input channel mixer that is pretty fantastic - it even allows for gain staging of physical inputs on your audio interface that don’t have gain controls. Halfway through their fourth version, PreSonus has added a bunch of interesting features. The app has only grown exponentially from there, and if you were walking the floor at NAMM this past year, you could see it utilized by professional companies everywhere. Studio One made a splash by offering a ton of robust features in a free tier of the application, and I’m sure that locked down a loyal fan base from day one. ![]() I’ll be honest, when Studio One first came on the scene, I wasn’t sure where it would fit in the already crowded DAW market.
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