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Using cubase 4
Using cubase 4









using cubase 4
  1. #USING CUBASE 4 INSTALL#
  2. #USING CUBASE 4 MANUAL#
  3. #USING CUBASE 4 FULL#
  4. #USING CUBASE 4 REGISTRATION#

It's obvious he has a ton of experience demoing and teaching Cubase, because he presents everything in a The tutorial is taught by Steve Kostrey, who for ten years worked as a product specialist and clinician for Steinberg. Moreover, there are some unexpected but much appreciated lessons, like two chapters on managing your audio files to make sure you account for them properly when you transfer projects elsewhere.

#USING CUBASE 4 FULL#

Also, seemingly simple but very powerful interface elements-like the Event Infoline-are introduced early on, but are later explained in further detail, allowing you to take advantage of some of their functionality during easier exercises but then use them to their full potential for more complex tasks later. What can you learn from the tutorial? Well, as you might guess, I picked up a bunch of keyboard and mouse shortcuts, but more importantly, because this really is a tutorial with actual tasks to be completed, I mastered a few workflows that are more efficient than ones I'd employed previously. I gave up on the app, and watched the video DVD a second time using Windows Media Player, which allows you to jump around easily (unlike Apple's featureless DVD Player).

#USING CUBASE 4 REGISTRATION#

Then my plan was to go back to certain chapters by opening their Quicktime movies on the DVD-ROM (the files are numbered and named appropriately), but the QT movies won't play without ASK's special player application, and that application requires online registration before it will even start (true for both Mac and Windows viewing). I first watched the video DVD in Apple's DVD Player. The DVD-ROM also holds the aforementioned work-along Cubase projects.

using cubase 4

#USING CUBASE 4 INSTALL#

You can choose to watch the two-sided DVD (NTSC on one side, PAL on the other), or you can install a proprietary application that plays back Quicktime movies from a DVD-ROM. I've already watched it twice-once while editing along with the included project files and a second time as a refresher while doing email and other tasks at my computer before a Cubase tracking session the next day. In short, if you are new to Cubase (or to DAWs in general) or even if you're an intermediate user, this tutorial could be one of the best purchases you make. If you want to get the most out of Cubase, you will get far more by exploring for yourself than what you’ll get in here.David Hidek and Garrett's positive review of the ASK Video Sibelius Tutorial DVD bundle (Tape Op #62) prompted me to check out ASK's Cubase 4 Tutorial. I personally have no issue with suggesting that a poster should check the manual, in fact I do it often and will continue to do so.

#USING CUBASE 4 MANUAL#

In addition to Jack’s suggestion below, you can always import an existing Midi file (you can find heaps of them on the net) into Cubase, set up an instrument track, assign the instrument track out to the VSTi of choice, then drag the imported MIDI onto the instrument track.Īnd about manuals- while I agree that resources such as Idiots Guide and this forum can be very helpful in getting information, in the end the manual has the most detailed information, and presents it in a less ambiguous way than the alternatives, particularly for more advanced functions. I personally don’t use one because I’m crap at keyboard playing. I don’t think it’s absolutely necessary, but it can make life easier. Is it absolutley necessary to connect one?











Using cubase 4