![]() ![]() If you want a ‘scratchpad’ type of DAW I recommend RapidComposer or SoundTrek Jammer Pro…The guy who developed Jammer pro is a great composer & it shows in the demos. Nearly as good but still developed is Presonus Studio One, Best piano roll is in FL Studio with Magix Samplitude as a close second. If you like working with MIDI the best ever prog was Cakewalk Project5 which I still use. Like most Trackers though MIDI import is horrible or non-existant. So…I am SURE without a doubt renoise is capable. BUT…I have dug around & found Classical, Jazz, RnB, Fusion, Funk, Country, Ambient, Chillout, Soul, Bossa, Afro-Cuban & more done in So I suppose 99% here are using renoise for modern styles probably because they have never tried anything else & there are no good demo tunes in renoise to promote other genres. I had a whole post on this that seems to have disappeared. There are actually a few here making jazz & fusion with it. Melody Editor Melodya is a motive generator and editor, which was integrated into RapidComposer as a Melody Editor tab in v4.0. Different types of workflows are supported. Well, I have to strongly disagree with posts saying renoise is just good for modern styles. RapidComposer will generate a multi-track composition with chords based on your settings, using your phrases. I am not so much interested of diverse sound-libraries, just a decent Piano sound is OK for me.Īny suggestions, clarifications, ideas I will appreciate extremely much. ![]() I would like to be able to record/write automation of these transformations, and finally to export it as MIDI or XML file for further editing/composing/orchestrating. I would like to have ability to easily generate a scale, to add a chord, random arpeggio, delay etc. What I am mostly looking after is a powerful MIDI transformator, similar to what is found in Ableton Live: Arpeggiator, Scale, Chord etc plugins, but probably even some more. I don’t know what is difference between Logic/Live and Renoise/Redux, and where they excell. I use mostly Logic (for improvisation recording, both MIDI and audio), Ableton Live (for MIDI effects like: Arpeggiator, Scale, Random…), Finale for notating, and other software for audio editing and notation. Is there anyone from this side (contemporary-classical not pop/rap/techno/rave/etc…) that use Renoise or Redux for music creation? I am wandering around the Internet and just interested in some new software that would help me realize my ideas in composing. In general I compose a lot of orchestral music. I am a contemporary-classical professional-freelance composer and musician. ![]()
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