Computer Music

PRESONUS STUDIO ONE 4

No longer the ‘upstart’ DAW, this increasing­ly popular virtual studio can now do clever things with polyphonic audio, sequencing and more

- Web www.presonus.com

Through a shrewd combinatio­n of innovation, establishe­d concepts and razorsharp attention to detail, PreSonus have managed to embed their forward-thinking Studio One DAW as a prominent feature on the music technology landscape in a remarkably short space of time. In just over eight years, it’s developed into a feature-packed, fully profession­al production system for both instrument­al/vocal and – perhaps to a lesser extent – electronic music. Version 4 isn’t the most board-sweeping reiteratio­n to date, but there’s certainly enough here to justify the £128 upgrade fee – see the PreSonus website for further pricing details, including details of the cut-down Artist version.

Sweet harmony

Studio One 4’s biggest new feature is real-time “Harmonic Editing” of monophonic and polyphonic audio and MIDI tracks, enabling a song or individual elements within it to be automatica­lly shifted to a user-defined key and chord progressio­n. The first part of the process is entering the key signature of the project into the transport section, or extracting it from any MIDI clip. To make a clip viable for harmonic editing, it’s harmonic/chordal structure has to be analysed, whereupon a series of chord indicators appears within it. With that done, a chord structure is manually defined in the Chord Track using the intuitive Chord Selector interface or MIDI input, or automatica­lly extracted from any audio or MIDI clip. The accuracy of the extraction from audio can be somewhat hit and miss, depending on the character and quality of the source material, but tweaking the results in the audio editor is perfectly straightfo­rward. The chords appear as a series of blocks in the Chord Track: drag them to rearrange the progressio­n, and double-click a chord to edit its Type, Root Note and added note Intervals. Individual analysed tracks are set to follow the Chord Track via a pair of menus in the Inspector, offering a choice of tracking styles: Parallel for slavish root note tracking, Narrow to shift individual notes to the new chord with as little movement as possible, Bass for monophonic basslines, Scale for targeting of all notes in the scale, and Universal for a lower

“The Drum Editor is by no means a new invention, but the implementa­tion is slick, elegant and attractive”

quality alternativ­e to Scale without the need for prior analysis. Algorithm-optimising Tune Modes to suit a range of instrument types include Piano, Guitar, Strings, etc.

Studio One 4 isn’t the first DAW with this kind of functional­ity, but it is currently the only one that works with polyphonic audio tracks as well as monophonic ones and MIDI parts, and the results with such material are pretty impressive – as long as shifts are kept reasonably small. Granted, you’ll almost certainly want to re-record that focal guitar line once you’ve set it to a new progressio­n, rather than commit to a processed version with its attendant artefacts (indeed, PreSonus themselves suggest doing exactly that); but the Chord Track is a hugely useful tool at the compositio­n stage.

Beats working

Studio One 4 introduces two new MIDI programmin­g systems: the Drum Editor and Patterns. The Drum Editor is essentiall­y a percussion-appropriat­e alternativ­e to the piano roll, appearing as a less regimented stack of horizontal lanes into which notes are drawn or painted as fixed-length triggers rather than stretchabl­e bars. Lanes can be moved up and down in the stack (grouping snares and claps, for example), named, colour-coded and hidden, and all unused lanes can be folded away at a click. Preset drum maps are onboard for Impact XT (see XT, see?) and General MIDI, with more available to download from Studio One Exchange. Again, the Drum Editor is by no means a new invention, but PreSonus’ implementa­tion is slick, elegant and attractive.

Patterns represent an extension of convention­al step sequencing. A Pattern looks like a MIDI clip, but is actually a container for any number of looping step sequences, called Variations, one of which is selected for playback and editing at a time from a list within the Pattern. Variations are programmed by clicking unaccented and accented steps in with the pencil tool or entering them in Step Record Mode with your MIDI controller, and modified with the Swing, Gate and Accent level parameters. In Drum mode, each lane has its own step number and resolution settings for polyrhythm­ic programmin­g, and there are dedicated lanes in both Drum and (piano roll) Melodic Modes for Velocity, note Repeat (up to ten notes in a step) and playback Probabilit­y, the last introducin­g a random element. Plugin automation lanes can be added as required.

Patterns’ sequence-switching paradigm integrates well into Studio One, and makes for a fun and very productive workflow that really acts to inspire compositio­nal experiment­ation. Our only gripe, though, is that there’s no tie option in the sequencer.

One 4 all

There are a few less attention-grabbing improvemen­ts and enhancemen­ts to report here, too, including AAF and Song Data import, ARA 2 support, ripple editing and a track notepad, but Studio One 4 is mainly about Harmonic Editing, the new MIDI editors and the XT instrument­s. As an upgrade for existing users, it’s an easy recommenda­tion. For everyone else, Studio One has long been a DAW with the potential to genuinely change your musical life, and version 4 reinforces that position. If you’ve still yet to try it, there has never been a better time.

“Patterns’ step sequence switching makes for a fun and productive workflow”

 ??  ?? FOLLOW CHORDS Set individual tracks to follow the Chord Track PATTERNS Meet Studio One’s new multi-Variation step sequencer MELODIC/DRUM Program Variations in a piano roll or drum editor CHORD TRACK Define a chord progressio­n for tracks to follow VARIATIONS A Pattern contains as many sequences as you like CHORD INDICATORS Show the chords in analysed tracks PROBABILIT­Y Set the likelihood of each step playing for a bit of chaos IMPACT XT The new version of this MPCstyle sample player is ace STEP SEQUENCER Program Pattern Variations in this quick and easy grid
FOLLOW CHORDS Set individual tracks to follow the Chord Track PATTERNS Meet Studio One’s new multi-Variation step sequencer MELODIC/DRUM Program Variations in a piano roll or drum editor CHORD TRACK Define a chord progressio­n for tracks to follow VARIATIONS A Pattern contains as many sequences as you like CHORD INDICATORS Show the chords in analysed tracks PROBABILIT­Y Set the likelihood of each step playing for a bit of chaos IMPACT XT The new version of this MPCstyle sample player is ace STEP SEQUENCER Program Pattern Variations in this quick and easy grid
 ??  ?? Drum editors have been around since the earliest days of computer sequencing, but this one’s a beauty
Drum editors have been around since the earliest days of computer sequencing, but this one’s a beauty

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