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I felt the same way of upgrading Reason v3 to v4; Thor is great, but not worth the cost/time compared to what I thought SM could do to me at the time. But for me or anyone one else to buy Record 1.0 for $150, & getting a solid pitch corrector/effects (which retails for $100-200USD) is well worth it IMHO. Also since I skipped the Reason v4 upgrade, I get for free a new drum synth, Thor, better editing, etc. I'm not so sure if that drum synth is so easy to dismiss since you can re-route the drum synths effects to anything, so even if you're not loving it you can still use it. I'm used to skipping versions to save money (doing the same thing to skip Live8), but I think Propellerheads can charge more for upgrades since their software is rock-solid; have you ever seen a "Reason crashes too much" forum thread ever? If you're looking for free upgrades then use freeware, which I do sometimes also. Professional software has its costs.Jay wrote:Well i am testing Reason 5 atm and i have to say i am not very impressed tbh, Yes it is still the great prog it has always been (I've used it since v1) its the little amount of stuff that has been added or changed that i find fairy unimpressive.
imho this should have been an update and not a new version! it is just as bad as when, after several years of the reason community begging for audio in they bring out Record as a separate package forcing the dedicated users to either buy and move to another sequencer or get Record (which is toy town bollocks!) just do do a nowadays basic function.

infuzion wrote:I felt the same way of upgrading Reason v3 to v4; Thor is great, but not worth the cost/time compared to what I thought SM could do to me at the time. But for me or anyone one else to buy Record 1.0 for $150, & getting a solid pitch corrector/effects (which retails for $100-200USD) is well worth it IMHO. Also since I skipped the Reason v4 upgrade, I get for free a new drum synth, Thor, better editing, etc. I'm not so sure if that drum synth is so easy to dismiss since you can re-route the drum synths effects to anything, so even if you're not loving it you can still use it. I'm used to skipping versions to save money (doing the same thing to skip Live8), but I think Propellerheads can charge more for upgrades since their software is rock-solid; have you ever seen a "Reason crashes too much" forum thread ever? If you're looking for free upgrades then use freeware, which I do sometimes also. Professional software has its costs.Jay wrote:Well i am testing Reason 5 atm and i have to say i am not very impressed tbh, Yes it is still the great prog it has always been (I've used it since v1) its the little amount of stuff that has been added or changed that i find fairy unimpressive.
imho this should have been an update and not a new version! it is just as bad as when, after several years of the reason community begging for audio in they bring out Record as a separate package forcing the dedicated users to either buy and move to another sequencer or get Record (which is toy town bollocks!) just do do a nowadays basic function.
Comparing Reason to SM is unfair, since:
1) SM has 0.4 of a dev split between running 3-5 other SM-related tasks, Propellerheads is has a full team.
2) Reason is multi-platform, SM will be stuck forever on PC-only it seems.
3) SM still crashes occasionally, host compatibility issues, has memory leaks/overwrites. Reason is always solid.
4) Reason you pay a few extra dollars for no-drama upgrades, SM you pay in time for lots of beta-testing & bug reporting (atleast I & a dozen other have).
5) Many of the SM's "upgrades" were more like bug fixes/workarounds or adding to SM what should have been there in the first place. FlowStone is the only real big upgrade, & that is a payed upgrade (if you're making large OSMs etc). There may have been a few bonus features added to SM, but Reason2.5 was a decent free upgrade and the pitch-correcter for Record owners worth the Record price by itself.
Ps,,, Record should of been Reason 4.5.0 Mixingdesk+Pitch correction,O yeh & thoses """embeded""" tunes that weigh in at almost 500 Megs, WTF,,, was that stunt...lol2nvu wrote:...No one could "seriously" consider Mastering a Full Track from Reason , with its weird sounding, not quite 16bit...
oddson wrote:2nvu wrote:...No one could "seriously" consider Mastering a Full Track from Reason , with its weird sounding, not quite 16bit...
I'm often hearing some fairly dismissive comments about Reason/Record but I'm not sure what evidence the people making these accusations are using.
OK so it's not 24 bit... what makes you say 'weird sounding' and 'not quite 16 bit'?
It seems no matter what the app someone thinks it's crap... that's fair enough but to suggest 'no one' could use it seems a bit too harsh.

oddson wrote:p.s. I'm not saying there isn't something... i'd just like to know what it is and what evidence there is for it.
I've been using Record for my own music lately and with my middle-aged hearing I couldn't say more than 'it sounds OK to me'!

will have to look at it, i currently use Melodyne and sometimes but rarely now, i use an old hardware Autotune box that came from Antares before the Autotune software.oddson wrote: (from what little I understand specialty mastering applications are still favoured by commercial studios)


If you never use Kong, then I'd say the rest of Reason5.0 is not worth it either. But if you're sitting on Reason 3.0 like I was then buying Record1.0 now is GO GO GO since all you're getting is so worth $160USD!Jay wrote:I will keep testing though as things have a tendency to grow on me,But i still don't see the same greatness we have become used to seeing from the Props
I think Reason/Record is somewhat limited since they seem to target people who think in a certain way, back in the old hardware days. Sometimes limits can open door to ingenuity. I'm not huge on the GUI overall, but I can live with it. Sometimes I do wish I went with FL Studio instead, but I do prefer Reason's "sheen" sound.Nu Audio Science wrote:However for myself i found it very limiting and Record even more so, in fact i would go as far as saying the only thing i found of remote interest to me was the pitching algo
Beyond that it all seemed a little insular and up its own a*s, i got a free copy to review and when props read my review they wanted so much changed that it was handed to another reviewer and after he said pretty much the same things the review was never published
...The old classic of "It's so stable because it doesn't run VST plugins" is a total bunch of crap nowadays really
Last time Reaper crashed on me was so long ago i think it was pre v1 and i am pretty sure plenty of hosts can now claim to be the same

infuzion wrote:No, I meant on a GUI-level, such as Buzz's straight-lines-connecting-small-squares setup, rather than the semi-real-life simulation of rack-mounted gear with many loose cables connecting them all.Acrobat wrote:Actually, there IS more interacting than audio. A secondary patching system in Reason is CV and gate emulation, since the 2.0 version you can drive many modules with the same impulses...infuzion wrote:I do wish the module interacting was more like Buzz; that's what attracted me to SM. But it does work very solidly.

infuzion wrote:If you never use Kong, then I'd say the rest of Reason5.0 is not worth it either. But if you're sitting on Reason 3.0 like I was then buying Record1.0 now is GO GO GO since all you're getting is so worth $160USD!Jay wrote:I will keep testing though as things have a tendency to grow on me,But i still don't see the same greatness we have become used to seeing from the Props
oddson: Most tips I see about mastering is to do it in 24bit for the extra dynamics headroom.I think Reason/Record is somewhat limited since they seem to target people who think in a certain way, back in the old hardware days. Sometimes limits can open door to ingenuity. I'm not huge on the GUI overall, but I can live with it. Sometimes I do wish I went with FL Studio instead, but I do prefer Reason's "sheen" sound.Nu Audio Science wrote:However for myself i found it very limiting and Record even more so, in fact i would go as far as saying the only thing i found of remote interest to me was the pitching algo
Beyond that it all seemed a little insular and up its own a*s, i got a free copy to review and when props read my review they wanted so much changed that it was handed to another reviewer and after he said pretty much the same things the review was never published
...The old classic of "It's so stable because it doesn't run VST plugins" is a total bunch of crap nowadays really
Last time Reaper crashed on me was so long ago i think it was pre v1 and i am pretty sure plenty of hosts can now claim to be the same
That is wack that your review didn't get published. I don't weigh in on magazine & online reviews much anyway; too many negative will prevent them from getting free product. I would like to see your review on Reason5/Record1.5 sometime though!
Wow, I didn't know Reaper was so stable! I'm wondering if they're taking Protools' crowd yet?
Honestly, I'd like to see the VST standard done away with & ReWire made into 2-way communication. Could solve alot of VST issues on both sides.

Nu Audio Science wrote:oddson wrote: (from what little I understand specialty mastering applications are still favoured by commercial studios)
Just out of interest i know of at least three of the top mastering houses in the world now use Reaper for mastering
But other than that the ones i have used in the past up until now have pretty much used the high end Sony sonic systems
I wouldn't like to comment on Reason sounding good or not because i can actually point to a whole bunch of songs made entirely in Reason that i would happily play in a DJ set
However for myself i found it very limiting and Record even more so, in fact i would go as far as saying the only thing i found of remote interest to me was the pitching algo
Beyond that it all seemed a little insular and up its own a*s, i got a free copy to review and when props read my review they wanted so much changed that it was handed to another reviewer and after he said pretty much the same things the review was never published
I wouldn't personally touch it with a bargepole and the bloated nature of Record scared me away faster than anything else
The old classic of "It's so stable because it doesn't run VST plugins" is a total bunch of crap nowadays really
Last time Reaper crashed on me was so long ago i think it was pre v1 and i am pretty sure plenty of hosts can now claim to be the same
NAS
Mac Snobbery ? lol
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