![]() ![]() Perform live with 100 instrument, effect, and MIDI plug-ins or work with Audio Units plug-ins.Add your sounds from Logic Pro and GarageBand to bring your studio sound to the stage.Support for the Touch Bar on MacBook Pro provides convenient controls for layout, editing, and performance.Instantly set up a large variety of hardware using automatic device recognition.Use USB and MIDI-equipped controllers like keyboards, foot pedals, and drum pads.Connect your favorite hardware and use it to play and control your plug-ins.64-bit architecture uses all the RAM in your system for larger sampled instruments.Perform with stereo or multitrack backing tracks using Playback.Design rich keyboard Patches using splits and layers, the Arpeggiator, and other MIDI plug-ins.Switch between Patches without stopping sound output or cutting off held notes.Combine instruments and live audio, such as keyboards and vocals, in a single Patch. Quickly assign hardware knobs, buttons, and faders to onscreen controls. ![]() ![]() Manage sophisticated rigs using the Assignments & Mapping overview.See only what you need during your performance using a customizable, full-screen live interface.Screen controls adapt for each Patch using Smart Controls.Smart Controls offer dynamic performance controls that change with each Patch.Easily view your Mac screen from a distance using a high-contrast, full-screen performance view.Play or create a wide variety of rich sampled instruments with Sampler and Quick Sampler.Turn your favorite hardware synthesizers into sampled instruments using the Auto Sampler plug-in.Quickly find sounds or create unique new ones with Alchemy, the ultimate sample manipulation synthesizer.Play classic ’70s- and ’80s-style synthesizer sounds using Retro Synth.Play faithful models of vintage keyboards with Vintage B3, Vintage Electric Piano, and Vintage Clav.Perform inspired sounds using a collection of synths that provide analog, wavetable, FM, additive, granular, spectral, and modeling synthesis.Play deeply sampled, professionally mixed, and fully customizable drum kits provided by Drum Kit Designer.Perform electronic beats with the Ultrabeat drum machine.Transform simple ideas into elaborate performances using nine MIDI plug-ins.Instantly turn a simple chord into a rich performance with the Arpeggiator.Play a single note to trigger predefined chords with Chord Trigger.Perform a part and conform notes to a specific scale using Transposer.Play your sounds through a variety of realistic acoustic spaces or creative synthesized reverbs.Use a range of multi-tap, vintage tape, and stereo delays.Add movement to your tracks with a variety of modulation effects.Get the perfect mix with a collection of vintage and modern EQs, dynamics, and other mixing tools.Build your own guitar or bass rig with Amp Designer using vintage and modern amps, cabinets, and mics.Design a custom Pedalboard from a collection of delay, distortion, and modulation stompboxes.Access a full-screen Tuner to quickly get in tune.Over 5,900 instrument and effect patches.Instead of a $1,199 up-front cost, a future MacBook Air could cost $149.99 a month with Apple One and Final Cut Pro. With low subscription rates, Apple could keep us paying forever if we want the best out of our devices. It wasn’t all that long ago when Apple charged for all of those things. Then there’s the iWork suite (Pages, Numbers, and Keynote), iMovie, Clips, Shazam, and even macOS itself. By comparison, Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro look like bargains, costing about 15 cents a day to use with the ability to cancel at any time.īut who’s to say Apple’s subscription model will only apply to these apps? Apple also sells MainStage ($29.99), Motion ($49.99), Compressor ($49.99), and Remote Desktop ($79.99), and previously offered in-app purchases for GarageBand. Granted, those terms are still cheaper and friendlier than the comparable Adobe apps, Premiere Pro and Audition, which each cost $31.49 a month with no commitment, $20.99 a month on an annual basis (with a cancellation fee equal to 50 percent of the remaining balance), or $239.88 per year. Based on the subscription terms above, someone who started using Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro in 2011 would by now have paid around $1,700 for the same software that in reality cost $498.98 to buy outright. ![]() That might not sound like terrible pricing, but consider that it’s been 10 years since Apple has offered a paid update to either app. Final Cut Pro on the iPad will be Apple’s first app that requires a subscription-but it won’t be the last.īased on the current prices, a subscription model for Final Cut Pro on the Mac will likely cost $9.99 a month or $99 a year, while Logic Pro will probably be a little cheaper, maybe $6.99 a month/$69.99 a year. ![]()
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