FL's Piano Roll starts out in Pencil Mode. Quantization simply isn't treated with the same sense of importance. FL has fewer Quantize options than many other DAWs. In FL, Quantize is "Alt+Q", and is buried amidst several options in the menu. In many DAWs, "Quantize" is a single keystroke: "Q". If you don't have a controller, FL's workflow is the way to go. The difference manifests itself in numerous small feature/workflow differences, which make a big difference once combined.
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Many other DAWs (especially heavyweight linear sequencers like Cubase, Pro Tools, Logic) have piano rolls which are designed around modifying recorded MIDI. Post added at 08:41 AM - Previous post was at 08:38 AM -įL's Piano Roll is designed around point-and-click creation from scratch. Wish it was 64-bit, too - then I'd look at ReWiring/VSTing it into REAPER. Also, there is no direct way to copy plugin settings from one channel to another. I don't like FL's mixing workflow - not happy with how each channel isn't assigned a separate mixer channel by default. It also has an excellent clip system for automation, great for trap (pitching and panning a snare roll) and dubstep (modulating almost everything). Let's face it - when you're making trap music, you're not going to actually play-in those 64th-note snare rolls. Its workflow is designed to be mouse-and-keyboard-friendly.
Pro Tools LE used to require that you used their horrible MBox interface (and Pro Tools HD was WAY out of the price range of the average producer).įL Studio is actually excellent for creating trap and dubstep music. If the market is saturated with amateurs using FL Studio, doesn't it make sense that it would be toward the top?Įach of these "expensive" DAWs comes with its own problems. Is it ordered by the staff of the publication, or is it selected by popular votes? MusicRadar (Computer Music Magazine) has people VOTE on it, and people usually vote for whatever they use. Well, take a look at who is choosing the list.