Computer Music

TRACKTION WAVEFORM

The latest version of Tracktion adds so many redefining features that the developers have seen fit to relaunch it with a brand new name

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As you’ll probably have realised from the screenshot­s, Waveform is the new name for Tracktion, the ‘upstart’ DAW from Tracktion Software that we last looked at in 231, where version 7 scored 9/10. The first thing that existing users need to know is that this is still very much the software they know and love. In fact, upon launching Waveform, apart from the tweaked colour scheme, you’ll be hard pushed to tell the difference between it and Tracktion 7. It still centres on the single-screen interface that’s fundamenta­l to its workflow, where contextual menus and panels give access to everything you need in a unified space, MIDI clips are edited directly on their host tracks, and a left-to-right ‘inline’ signal flow stands in for a dedicated mixer. But this time around, there’s more…

All mixed up

That mixerless single-screen workspace has been one of Tracktion’s biggest selling points since version 1 (2003), but Waveform sees the GUI spreading its wings with the addition of not only a ‘proper’ mixer but also a dedicated MIDI Editor panel, both of which can be housed within the main screen and/or their own separate windows. This aggregate of transforma­tive features marks a huge and very welcome change in direction for Tracktion, whose steadfast refusal to break out from that one window was starting to feel… well, a bit bloody-minded.

The Mixer and MIDI Editor are opened and closed using key commands or the minuscule launch buttons at the top-right corner of the main window. They appear in between the Edit Page and Properties Panel, making Waveform look every bit the modern multi-panel DAW.

The Mixer boasts all the main functions you’d expect to find in such a thing – levels and panning, Mute and Solo, insertion of plugins, etc – and a solid array of viewing options, including height adjustment of each of its sections, three channel widths, the ability to run the meters alongside the channel faders or in their own section, and a meter bridge-style level overview strip. Clicking the top-right button opens a second instance of the Mixer in a new tab, which can be dragged out as a new window for reposition­ing on a second monitor or in its own

“Waveform sees the GUI spreading its wings with a ‘proper’ mixer and a dedicated MIDI Editor panel”

Space in OS X/macOS. As well as the Mixer itself, the Mixer window includes the collapsibl­e Properties Panel and an arrangemen­t overview, in which the playhead and Markers can be moved.

The MIDI Editor, meanwhile, simply provides a persistent contextual piano roll for editing the selected MIDI clip – or multiple clips together – with the full compliment of tools found in the in-track editor, plus optional background reference waveform from any audio track in the project. Like the Mixer, it can break out to its own window for placing on a second monitor (but not, in this case, its own OS X Space), making MIDI editing in Waveform faster and less claustroph­obic than it was in Tracktion.

Patterns pending

Even more interestin­gly in the MIDI department, the all-new Pattern Generator enables musical note sequences to be conjured out of thin air. It’s tabbed into the Properties Panel and offers four modes of, er, pattern generation: Arpeggio, Chords, Bassline and Melody.

Having set your Global key, you select from an enormous and user-expandable library of three- and four-chord progressio­ns to populate the clip with a repeating sequence of chords, arpeggios (with 24 direction modes!), bass notes, or muted chords out of which melodies can be pulled using the paintbrush tool – ingenious! The Pattern Generator panel has controls for messing with note lengths, gate times, octave range and more, and each chord in the progressio­n is editable in the MIDI Editor via a dropdown menu. It all adds up to an impressive collection of songwritin­g aids that will serve as handy timesavers for those versed in theory, and that newcomers to compositio­n will find both productive and educationa­l.

Waving not drowning

That’s the meat of Waveform’s new goodies covered, but we should make quick mention of the MIDI Chord Generator plugin (trigger chords from single notes), the multiple colour schemes (full user editing thereof next, we hope!), and the laudable addition of Raspberry Pi support.

While some might interpret the rolling in of a regular mixer and the new multi-window approach as Tracktion Software torching their own USP and ‘selling out’, we say it’s exactly what the DAW needed to keep it moving forward. And, of course, if you don’t like them, you don’t have to use them – leave those tiny Mixer and MIDI Editor buttons alone and you’re effectivel­y still using Tracktion. We’d wager, though, that even the grumpiest naysayer – particular­ly if they’ve got two or more screens – will find them indispensa­ble once they try them, as they introduce a whole new level of customisab­ility that can’t reasonably be seen as anything but a good thing.

A milestone update, Waveform elegantly normalises Tracktion’s workflow without compromisi­ng its famous creative focus in any way – indeed, the compositio­nal power of the Pattern Generator makes it more artistical­ly liberating than ever. Easily going toe-to-toe with rivals costing several times more, this is a DAW that needs to be on every producer’s radar. www.tracktion.com

“Select from an enormous and userexpand­able library of three- and four-chord progressio­ns”

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 ??  ?? You can break the mixer out into its own window to use on a second monitor or in its own Space on a Mac system
You can break the mixer out into its own window to use on a second monitor or in its own Space on a Mac system

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