![]() Our comments below player - to open the player in the shootout window so you can add to it click here If you find this review useful, can we ask you to like our Facebook Page or Sign up to our Newsletter at the bottom of the page so we can let you know when new ones are available? Here they are for your listening pleasure. Here’s what they look like - If you want to go direct to the SHOOTOUTS CLICK HERE So in this first instalment we will be comparing the stock EQs that come with Logic and Pro Tools the Logic Channel EQ and the Avid/Pro Tools EQ III. ![]() ![]() Through this series we will be comparing some stock plugins from two of the most utilized DAWs. Also it’s a good bit of fun don’t ya think? With that in mind, and putting aside for the moment things like usability and functionality - Do the free tools provided by them like EQs, Compressors etc sound effectively the same, or can they if used substantially define the sound of the DAW? We are not saying you should select your DAW based on the free tools they come with but more so that if you have a DAW you should know how it’s tools sound, work and how you an potentially get the potential strengths out of them and avoid the potential weaknesses. More often in the world of forums and groups now it seems in these discussions tend towards that DAWs have now reached a point where they all sound the same in the fundamental aspects and the difference in DAW is just about workflow aesthetic, usability (open to debate if you realllly feel like it (not the point we are trying to make here though)), and most of all the plugins that you choose to use in them. The debate has raged on for years about if DAWs sound different and the reasons or beliefs why.
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