Audio slicing? MIDI out? Pan knobs?īut, here’s the paradox: Reason has something irrational about it that either drives people utterly batty or makes them fall in love and have fun making music in a way no other tool does. I mean, any audiomatic retro transformer effect aside, this is a bit of an audiomatic retro upgrade. I’m glad I don’t have to write marketing copy for this. (I’m going to stop saying “finally” at this point just imagine it repeating.)Īnd there are dubstep and “even metal” presets in the included sound banks. If you love these devices, it’s fantastic news.
The banner features: MIDI output, some powerful external device features to support them, and yes, Propellerhead is at last taking advantage of the fact that they invented the REX slicing format that helped launch years of the slicing/looping/stretching craze. I found about it as our first readers did I got no advance warning on this one. Yes, in the latest unexpected product announcement (many of them here in the normally quiet month of March), Propellerhead is launching Reason 7. The surprise: we might get excited about all of this anyway. (Careful with those settings: it’s possible you may wind up making music on an Aeolian harp and wearing a toga.) In case things aren’t retro enough for you, though, we have effects you can switch on to make things more retro. So, you can use your computer to talk to your synth – that is, if you aren’t busy taking advantage of the computer’s ability to slice up audio.
#Propellerhead recycle vst software
And you can even get software for your computer that now supports MIDI output. All of these things use a ground-breaking format called MIDI that allows digital instruments to talk to one another.
It seems there’s a new synth called the Korg MS-20! Or you can have a monosynth with filter saturation – that arrangement of three oscillator knobs looks cool. Happy 2013, everyone! Here’s CDM with the latest news. Welcome in Reason’s unique Rack design? Yes.