by Lysander » Tue Jan 24, 2006 5:03 pm
I can sing.
...
Right, Pinner? I can sing right?
Anyway, souree forge does, indeed imply that i tis free. However i'd suggest actually, you know, trying the program(s) out so you can decide which one has the most workable interface and features and all that. Personally, I use GOld Wave, which a lot of people compare to Sound Forge in terms of editing capabilities. (compared, usually, unfavorably, but compared nonetheless, and it's a fraction of the price.) I haven't paid a dime on Gold Wave, either, as it's one of those fully-functional trial versions I just eep uninstalling and reinstalling. It's been such a good program for me, thoguh, that I would pay for it if I needed to. That said, Gold Wave, Sound Forge and (I think) Audacity (and maybe Audition?) are single-track recorders, so if you're going to do a multitrack recorder Sonar would be the way to go. Of course, if you want to go multitrack, I say buy a fucking mixing board with a hard drive and be done with it; you can do all the recording on a box that won't crash if you plug six things into it, put hte wave files on your computer, and then you can do all the editing of each track individually in a single-track thing like Audacity or Gold Wave or (wareZed) Sound Forge or what have you and then mix them all together when you're done.
I can sing.
...
Right, Pinner? I can sing right?
Anyway, souree forge does, indeed imply that i tis free. However i'd suggest actually, you know, trying the program(s) out so you can decide which one has the most workable interface and features and all that. Personally, I use GOld Wave, which a lot of people compare to Sound Forge in terms of editing capabilities. (compared, usually, unfavorably, but compared nonetheless, and it's a fraction of the price.) I haven't paid a dime on Gold Wave, either, as it's one of those fully-functional trial versions I just eep uninstalling and reinstalling. It's been such a good program for me, thoguh, that I would pay for it if I needed to. That said, Gold Wave, Sound Forge and (I think) Audacity (and maybe Audition?) are single-track recorders, so if you're going to do a multitrack recorder Sonar would be the way to go. Of course, if you want to go multitrack, I say buy a fucking mixing board with a hard drive and be done with it; you can do all the recording on a box that won't crash if you plug six things into it, put hte wave files on your computer, and then you can do all the editing of each track individually in a single-track thing like Audacity or Gold Wave or (wareZed) Sound Forge or what have you and then mix them all together when you're done.