Hi
First, about me and potential uses. Am both a maker of radio shows (music and announcements) for the Internet, and a musician who plays badly with a score and acceptably by ear. Instruments are voice (opera and folk), guitar and keyboard. Where possible I will use audio out rather than Midi since my Yamaha keyboard is really a synthesizer. But would like to use both.
I am a MAC user who was not that familar with METRO until looking at ads and reviews for various other software. I am one of those people who learns intuitively and actually finds manuals harder to understand (I failed math in HS..that was 35 years ago) because I take them too literally at times...... Learning curves are not lessened by manuals in my case.
Trying to see IF Metro is right for me, if so, which (all?) version(s)?
In recent years learned to use Garageband without the manual for the most part. (They don't have one anyway). This was after about 8 years when I self taught myself enough of Cakewalk in order to be able to do radio shows (one track for music and another for announcements). I also used First Hand (Motu?)for MIDI because it did not require that a player be that precise, the problem I found with some other Midi programs I tried.
It seemed to bend to the playing. Not sure what the term is. That was when I was a Windows user.
Which is why I liked Garageband. It was similar enough to Cakewalk.
but the Midi part is not there. And since I wouldlike to be able to combine both, I have thought of LOGIC EXPRESS or PRO since
they are related. But many people say the Learning Curve is hard.
Tehn I tried an earlier version or tracktion and it worked. Later version does not (I have a wierd M-Audio 410 and that MAY be the problem...it works ok with GB but nothing else right no). Presounus Firepod is what I would normally use and will be out of the shop soon.
Tried Live and a few others and found them not at all clear, too abstract or just no sound.
Well, anyway, I read somewhere that metro is easy to learn--one of the easiest. But not sure if that applies to all or just the extremely light one.
I think I can upgrade from the middle to the top one, but not from the lower to the middle or top, right?
In any case, I want to ask if one ofthese products may be right for me, given my description of being in the past relatively comfortable with what I do (ignoring what I don't need) with First Hand (Midi), Cakewalk (Audio mostly) and Garageband.
I wonder if ANY program is as intuitive as Firsthand was, for example, where Midi is concerned. And then, if it will be a realtively smooth switch from GB for audio?
I have a Dual G5 desktop.
Thanks
Paul Arenson
(Japan)
paul@tokyoprogressive.org