![]() It’s the ultimate creative workspace for aspiring musicians, producers, and audio engineers, providing all the necessary tools to bring your musical ideas to life. What Is a Digital Audio Workstation?Ī digital audio workstation (DAW) is a powerful and versatile tool that allows you to create, edit, and produce music and audio projects. We’ll look at the software’s key features and history, examine how it compares to its competitors, and offer tips on how to get the most from the software. After an extensive facelift in Reason 11, the software is now on its 12th iteration, but how does it compare to other products in the crowded DAW market? In this article, we’ll discuss everything you need to know about Reason. In future posts I will post more FL Studio tips that I’m sure will be of great help.If you’ve spent any amount of time in the world of Digital Audio Workstations, you’ve almost certainly come across Reason, the longstanding software offering from Reason Studios. These keyboard shortcuts, together with F5 to open/close the Playlist and F9 to open/close the Mixer, are the ones I use the most. Useful to better organize the structure of the production, pointing out for example where the choruses start. This will open a very nice window with all the patterns, instruments and channels we have in the project:Ītl+T: We create a “Time marker” annotation in the playlist. Right button on “Playlist-Pattern X”: Where X is the corresponding pattern number. If you look it increases the section where we have the pointer, if we move the pointer it will zoom in that new zone. +/- (Addition and subtraction buttons): In this section these two buttons will also be very useful as they allow us to change patterns quickly.Ĭtrl+Mouse wheel: We zoom. Super useful to “lengthen” the duration of our production for example. Quantizing will make it perfect.Ĭtrl+B: With the pattern or patterns that we want selected we press Ctrl+B and we duplicate it automatically after the selected ones. This is very useful because when recording the notes many times they will not be perfectly adjusted to the score, to the tempo, due to the latency of your card. ![]() You will get a small window where you can adjust the way and precision of the quantization. move the notes to the nearest whole note position. With the notes selected, Alt+Q will quantize them, i.e. ![]() ![]() It is very useful if we want to make a modification to all the notes simultaneously, like moving them for example. Ctrl+A: Select all the notes of that instrument.Then Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V to copy and paste. In the image I have selected only one instrument (Sampler in this case) but you can select as many as you want. The interesting thing is that we can copy the notes of several instruments at the same time to another pattern, simply by selecting the instruments we want as follows: Ctrl+C / Ctrl+V / Ctrl+X: Copy, paste and cut, of course.Click central mouse wheel: If we have the pointer over the name of an instrument or a pattern and we click with the central mouse wheel we will also get the corresponding window to change the name.+/- (Addition and subtraction buttons): Press these buttons to move to the next or previous pattern respectively.If we have just clicked on an instrument (plugin) what we will change will be the name of that instrument. F2: This is used to quickly change the name of the pattern we are in.
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