![]() ![]() ![]() When seated my eye level is horizontally about 8 inches above the top of the video monitor. Mix Console 1 is also where VST’s pop up, any media bay, and history window.Īll monitors are a bit lower and tipped slightly up. It works well when working with bass and drum issues at the same time. Yes, you can have key and drum editors open in the same monitor. Its saved for editor channel, and is also where key, drum, or half-key half drum edit windows pop up using workspaces. (This contains only inputs, groups, effects, and master out channels) Mix Console 1 (not full screen) in lower half.(From left to right starting with monitor 4) I use 4 21 inch monitors set as close as possible to each other. This is a huge time-saver.Īlso if you’ve already got a tablet (there is a phone version available aswell) it’s quite cheap.Īnd NO! I don’t work for Steinberg. No more running back and forth between the Studio and the Control Room. If I want to lay down some (say) vocals myself, and don’t have a spare engineer loitering around, I can take my iPad (or Android tablet) with me and control Cubase from the studio. I’m deffinetly not a fan of virtual faders but IC Pro can do something that otherwise only physical Control Panels can. It’s much faster to be able to access various features by pushing a (virtual) button, than using menus and the mouse or memorizing hundreds of Key Commands. It’s much easier to control Cubase with buttons, than with the alpha-numerical keyboard.Īccessing all manner of features in Cubase The way I see it, is has four huge benefits: However, I find that IC Pro has had a much bigger impact. Granted, the added screen real estate has speeded up my workflow. ![]() I’d advise anyone to take a close look at Cubase IC Pro, before investing in a second monitor. ![]()
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