![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I just think this might be a great suggestion for people starting out that have no cash. Including the webcam mic as a vocal input. And it works on the 10 year old shitty laptop I tried it on. I'm just impressed how far technology has come in the field. Especially if your goal is "just put some demos out quick". But I don't see any reason to use something like Audacity over this, at all. Obviously it's not going to be the best DAW, since there's no extra VSTs and VSTis, and its going to miss some features. Didn't feel like making some account, but I started making music in like 60 seconds after never going to the site.Īnyone else have experience with this thing? Any cons I should know about? Correct me if I'm wrong about that, but that's what it seems like. He can work on the project and add the vocals. What's crazy is that it saves to your profile, and you can share the projects I think. Kind of like FL studio, but made personal for each one. Like it's all set up specifically for their instruments. You can use the PC keyboard to play the virtual instruments. If you just want to set down some drums, a keyboard or synth, and play guitar or vox over it. It's like the closest thing to Garageband on PC, I think. It's closer to Reaper than Audacity I'd say. Tons of virtual instruments, midi sequencing, regular audio recording and monitoring (though latency might be weird), and. It's VERY streamlined, but has a ton of features. People that just got a guitar and want to mess around with writing stuff. I think this might be the DAW I'm going to suggest to beginners. Everything is in Chrome, or whatever you use. So BandLab is something I've heard about, but never used. (Despite the impressions I've had, definitely not related to this at all) ![]()
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