Views on Reaper!
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Eclectrophonic Eclectrophonic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=336599
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 327 posts since 24 Aug, 2014
Hi!
Calling all Reaper users.
Is it a very complicated daw to use? I demo'd it ages ago and it seemed very cumbersome.
I use Reason and I'm a bit fed up of waiting for simple features like muting a midi note.
I want to switch to Logic but don't have a Mac. Was thinking Reaper.
What are it's pro's and cons. I love that Imperial Theme btw.
Thanks!
Calling all Reaper users.
Is it a very complicated daw to use? I demo'd it ages ago and it seemed very cumbersome.
I use Reason and I'm a bit fed up of waiting for simple features like muting a midi note.
I want to switch to Logic but don't have a Mac. Was thinking Reaper.
What are it's pro's and cons. I love that Imperial Theme btw.
Thanks!
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- KVRian
- 872 posts since 28 Nov, 2016
I'm not sure. It's not cumbersome for me at all, but that could just because I'm "used to its cumbersomeness," as people tend to develop a second nature about even very difficult things if they're done them long enough.
Why don't you try demoing it again and see how it feels to finish a whole track. If your demo time expired, I'm sure there's a way to reset it—I don't think it'd be illegal for genuinely trying to decide whether to purchase it or not.
Why don't you try demoing it again and see how it feels to finish a whole track. If your demo time expired, I'm sure there's a way to reset it—I don't think it'd be illegal for genuinely trying to decide whether to purchase it or not.
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Eclectrophonic Eclectrophonic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=336599
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 327 posts since 24 Aug, 2014
It is only something like £45 ($60 US) to buy isn't it.
Just found when I demo'd it about 2 years ago, I couldn't crack on with a track as there was so many things to click or something wouldn't work and found you needed to click on many different things in menu's to do stuff. Just wanted to know if other people think it's worth it (s'pose you can't grumble at that price) to really get into.
Another thing that seriously let it down was the "No GUI" on it's native plug-ins. They could do with changing that.
Anyway, downloading it again and just wanted to ask, does it have any native synths in it or just effects?
s
Just found when I demo'd it about 2 years ago, I couldn't crack on with a track as there was so many things to click or something wouldn't work and found you needed to click on many different things in menu's to do stuff. Just wanted to know if other people think it's worth it (s'pose you can't grumble at that price) to really get into.
Another thing that seriously let it down was the "No GUI" on it's native plug-ins. They could do with changing that.
Anyway, downloading it again and just wanted to ask, does it have any native synths in it or just effects?
s
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- KVRist
- 80 posts since 8 Mar, 2018
Does anyone actually use the native Reaper plugins? I guess I suppose they work, but never really hard of anyone actually using them, lol.Eclectrophonic wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 3:50 pm It is only something like £45 ($60 US) to buy isn't it.
Just found when I demo'd it about 2 years ago, I couldn't crack on with a track as there was so many things to click or something wouldn't work and found you needed to click on many different things in menu's to do stuff. Just wanted to know if other people think it's worth it (s'pose you can't grumble at that price) to really get into.
Another thing that seriously let it down was the "No GUI" on it's native plug-ins. They could do with changing that.
Anyway, downloading it again and just wanted to ask, does it have any native synths in it or just effects?
s
Reaper is great if you have your own purchased plugins, or some free ones from online. My favorite part about it is that it almost never crashes, and it can do just about anything you can imagine, and if it can't, just Google it and someone probably has a downloadable script that will do it.
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- KVRAF
- 35502 posts since 11 Apr, 2010 from Germany
If you were looking at Logic, i'd rather say don't look at Reaper. Logic is streamlined, simple, and easy to get into. Reaper is sort of the opposite, for me, it's rather a DAW for people who know what they want, and how to establish it in Reaper. You can modify a lot, and you will have to, if you want your DAW to behave the way you want it to. I wouldn't even say it is particularly difficult to get into Reaper, but, it's a DAW for a certain clientel, and, if you don't belong to that clientel, you won't get happy with it, IMO.
Studio One might be more to your liking, because it also has a simplicistic, ease-of-use appeal. The GUI isn't perfect, but, it does the job. If you really can't live with the GUI or the looks, take a look at Cubase, which looks better, and feels more "tidy". I like that Studio One requires less clicks and open windows, though.
Studio One might be more to your liking, because it also has a simplicistic, ease-of-use appeal. The GUI isn't perfect, but, it does the job. If you really can't live with the GUI or the looks, take a look at Cubase, which looks better, and feels more "tidy". I like that Studio One requires less clicks and open windows, though.
- KVRAF
- 2767 posts since 5 Jun, 2011 from Preston, England, UK
I personally love REAPER and their stock EQ and Compressor are used extensively.twitewhite wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 3:58 pmDoes anyone actually use the native Reaper plugins? I guess I suppose they work, but never really hard of anyone actually using them, lol.Eclectrophonic wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 3:50 pm It is only something like £45 ($60 US) to buy isn't it.
Just found when I demo'd it about 2 years ago, I couldn't crack on with a track as there was so many things to click or something wouldn't work and found you needed to click on many different things in menu's to do stuff. Just wanted to know if other people think it's worth it (s'pose you can't grumble at that price) to really get into.
Another thing that seriously let it down was the "No GUI" on it's native plug-ins. They could do with changing that.
Anyway, downloading it again and just wanted to ask, does it have any native synths in it or just effects?
s
Reaper is great if you have your own purchased plugins, or some free ones from online. My favorite part about it is that it almost never crashes, and it can do just about anything you can imagine, and if it can't, just Google it and someone probably has a downloadable script that will do it.
The inner workings of vurts mind are a force to be reckoned with.
music is a need in my life...yes I could survive without it but tbh I dont know how
myfeebleeffort
https://paulroach2.bandcamp.com/
https://hearthis.at/83hdtrvm/
music is a need in my life...yes I could survive without it but tbh I dont know how
myfeebleeffort
https://paulroach2.bandcamp.com/
https://hearthis.at/83hdtrvm/
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- KVRAF
- 1998 posts since 16 Jan, 2013 from USA
It’s not actually complicated, but the menus would have you believe that. There are tons of commands and they’re not very nicely or concisely displayed. You can edit the menus, so look for some more coherent ones from users in the forums before you run screaming into the night.
- KVRian
- 976 posts since 16 Jan, 2012 from UK
reaper is an amazing app for the price esp.
it's almost infinitely configurable which is a double-edged sword, but if you know what you want to get out of it, that just means you can set it up exactly thet way you want. it's no harder to learn than most DAWs really. it's the best all-round daw there is imo.
it's almost infinitely configurable which is a double-edged sword, but if you know what you want to get out of it, that just means you can set it up exactly thet way you want. it's no harder to learn than most DAWs really. it's the best all-round daw there is imo.
- KVRAF
- 2767 posts since 5 Jun, 2011 from Preston, England, UK
It's also very stable and has no problems loading any vst I throw at it. As someone once said "I could rest my pint on it"
The inner workings of vurts mind are a force to be reckoned with.
music is a need in my life...yes I could survive without it but tbh I dont know how
myfeebleeffort
https://paulroach2.bandcamp.com/
https://hearthis.at/83hdtrvm/
music is a need in my life...yes I could survive without it but tbh I dont know how
myfeebleeffort
https://paulroach2.bandcamp.com/
https://hearthis.at/83hdtrvm/
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- KVRian
- 1090 posts since 24 Jul, 2018
Relevant.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpXqYk1FoWA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpXqYk1FoWA
twitewhite wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 3:58 pmDoes anyone actually use the native Reaper plugins? I guess I suppose they work, but never really hard of anyone actually using them, lol.Eclectrophonic wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 3:50 pm It is only something like £45 ($60 US) to buy isn't it.
Just found when I demo'd it about 2 years ago, I couldn't crack on with a track as there was so many things to click or something wouldn't work and found you needed to click on many different things in menu's to do stuff. Just wanted to know if other people think it's worth it (s'pose you can't grumble at that price) to really get into.
Another thing that seriously let it down was the "No GUI" on it's native plug-ins. They could do with changing that.
Anyway, downloading it again and just wanted to ask, does it have any native synths in it or just effects?
s
Reaper is great if you have your own purchased plugins, or some free ones from online. My favorite part about it is that it almost never crashes, and it can do just about anything you can imagine, and if it can't, just Google it and someone probably has a downloadable script that will do it.
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- KVRAF
- 2610 posts since 19 Mar, 2008 from germany
Cons:
- The first use is cumbersome, because it needs
a lot of customizing
- The default GUI is simple (some say "ugly")
- Some features are missing (no groove-templates,
no trackinspector, no decent pitch editor like
flex-pro in logic, a modular workflow is not really easy)
- No added synths (for many this is a "pro-argument"!)
- Extremely efficent code + very stable
- Exremely flexible and customizable. You can customize
nearly everything, create your own script-commands and
your own themes
- The standard-plugins look simple, but they are good +
efficient
I think a decision between Apple Logic and Cockos Reaper is
very difficult. Still Logic is probably the best featured DAW
with the best workflow (environment, folder-structure,
plugins). But it is constrained to the Mac-platform - with all
its "specialities".
Reaper is also a good DAW - it is still growing, but if you
really want to work with Reaper you have to invest a lot
of time for tweaking and customizing first.
free mp3s + info: andy-enroe.de songs + weird stuff: enroe.de
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- KVRian
- 1090 posts since 24 Jul, 2018
This is probably why Reaper clicked with me before every other DAW over a year ago when I got back into music. It's actually less complicated to me it works the way I thought a DAW should work today.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=naE9lEDth1g
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=naE9lEDth1g
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Distorted Horizon Distorted Horizon https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=392076
- Banned
- 3882 posts since 17 Jan, 2017 from Planet of cats
It can be annoying at first, but give some time to customization in shortcuts and it's the easiest DAW available.
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- KVRAF
- 2626 posts since 8 Sep, 2009
Don't get it why people keep saying that you have to "customize" Reaper before you can get things done. Sounds like an urban legend to me. Switched from Cubase and had to check a few things first, like you always have to, but then there was no further "diploma from the DAW University" needed.
You're not forced to make use of the versatility that's offered by Reaper and it's defo not necessary to know it inside out to use it like any other DAW.
You're not forced to make use of the versatility that's offered by Reaper and it's defo not necessary to know it inside out to use it like any other DAW.
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Eclectrophonic Eclectrophonic https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=336599
- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 327 posts since 24 Aug, 2014
Yes I thought that about the customisation. Gonna download White Ties, "Imperial Theme" too.elassi wrote: ↑Sat Feb 16, 2019 6:35 pm Don't get it why people keep saying that you have to "customize" Reaper before you can get things done. Sounds like an urban legend to me. Switched from Cubase and had to check a few things first, like you always have to, but then there was no further "diploma from the DAW University" needed.
You're not forced to make use of the versatility that's offered by Reaper and it's defo not necessary to know it inside out to use it like any other DAW.