![]() As it happens, while it’s a bit hidden, you can now download a 30-day demo – enough time to try finishing a project in DP and see if you like it. I’m a great fan of written tutorials, but some of this stuff really does benefit from a visual aid. Or watch Sound on Sound‘s breakdown of the upgrade: If you missed it before, I covered this when it debuted in February:ĭP10 adds clip launching, improved audio editing to MOTU’s DAW There’s a substantially beefed-up waveform editor. There are more ways to manipulate audio and pitch without jumping into a plug-in. There’s a Clip View that looks an awful lot like Ableton’s Session View, but with some new twists – and in a more traditional DAW, with stuff like proper video and cue support which Live so sorely lacks. And the software had to make the jump from Mac to Windows, which initially got tricky with Windows’ archaic high-density display support and left the screen hard to see.ĭP10 is interesting because it brings some genuinely new ideas. So now it’s time to dig in and start using the new stuff.ĭP has never been short on updates, but some of them certainly felt iterative. It is also possible to assign the outputs below the fader of each channel.DP10 for Mac and Windows, unveiled this spring, brought breakthrough features to the long-standing favorite DAW called Digital Performer.
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