Short backstory, I'm now on my 8th day in bed suffering severe back pains. No nothing serious just a "sort-of" herniated disc. It's a lot of pain for sure but it will pass I believe. Another week or so...
What to do then when you suddenly can't sit in front of your DAW of choice or walk even? (I need crutches to even get to the bathroom.) After a day of sulking I set out to actually (finally!) read up on Reaper. I have heard it being praised more than once and I've tried it a few times over the years but never gotten into it. So be it!
Another little back story: I started out on Steinbergs Pro 24 back in the day. Followed along with first release of Cubase (which was called Cubeat if I'm not mistaken). Later converted to Logic, just LOVED the environment! After having enough of Apple I decided to change to Studio One which I have used for about 9 years now. Not too impressed with the progress and I'm a tinkerer and there is not much to tinker with in Studio One.
Oboy! I have been a sleeper when it comes to Reaper? From what I can tell after watching far too many YouTube videos and reading forums and actually running it on my laptop (without any plugins or libraries) trying out different things, adding key commands, setting up menus and whatnot.
Just wow. The amount of control, of everything, is simply stunning. Ok, it has some VERY nasty habits (just like Blender) like selecting stuff with the right mouse button?!? Also, not so impressed with the MIDI-editing at first but after setting it up a bit and with the help of some very clever scripters it's way better than what I'm used to.
My main gripe was articulation switching. After Studio One released their Sound Variations, which gets auto-populated from VSL instruments, I thought it would be hard to switch to something else. While Reaticulate is good it is quite cumbersome to setup. I have managed to create two banks, one for Modern Scoring Strings and one for Modern Scoring Brass that I'm eager to try out when I can sit up again.
I feel Reapers biggest Pro is it's expandability and the control you have of everything. That is also it's greatest con. Oh, another BIG pro is that it is actually updated 2-3 times per month!
I searched the forum and it as been a few posts about people switching to Reaper and if those of you that actually did that, have you stayed? What is your take on it now?
And, you that have been onboard for awhile, please share some of your favorite scripts, settings and whatnot, I have a few more days reading I guess
