With that said it's very deep and takes some time and energy to learn. Mine does but Geist packs the workflow into one tight package. If your DAW offers all of that and you are comfortable then maybe you don't need it. I'm not building entire songs in it, it's usually sync'd to my DAW. I personally like the workflow, I can get evolving beats done in a flash. It is also a very powerful sequencer, with aleotoric and euclidean and polyrhythms possible. The workflow is fast, I drag in a loop it auto-chops it up and assigns the hits across the pads. It can serve as an excellent drum rack due to the layers and top-notch processing available (Battery is another option). Everything is facilitated toward ingesting/slicing audio content, assigning it to pads, building multilayer pads, sequencing the sounds and sequencing the patterns. Its closest counterpart would be an Akai MPC. DAWs have gotten a lot more powerful recently so it depends on what you're using.įundamentally it's a sequencer, you have multiple sounds, "scenes", and so on, to build an entire song if you wish. It has many features some DAWs may not have.
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February 2023
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