![]() ![]() Well, it’s finally possible: youcan now create a Tempo track and a Time Signature track in the TrackList on the Project window, and edit Tempo and Time Signature eventsdirectly on these tracks. I’m sure that I haven’t been the onl圜ubase user who, over the years, has dreamed of being able to see andedit Tempo and Time Signature events in the Project window withouthaving to open the Tempo Track editor. Note how the selected Time Signature eventshows up in the Event Info Line.īizarrely,one of the features I was happiest to see in Cubase 5 is also, bycomparison, one of the smallest. Note how the selected Time Signature event shows up inthe Event Info Line.Ĭubase 5 now makesit possible to include the Tempo and Time Signature tracks in the TrackList of the Project window. Enter Cubase 5.Ĭubase 5 now makes it possible toinclude the Tempo and Time Signature tracks in the Track List of theProject window. Although the uptake has been slow, the first third-partyVST3 plug-ins have now started to appear, and you get the feeling thatCubase 4 was, in retrospect, setting the scene for greater things tocome. Inaddition, the VST3 SDK was finally made available to third-partydevelopers. However,in the two years following Cubase 4’s release, Steinberg released twoimportant updates: 4.1, bringing significantly better mixer routing(and parity with Nuendo 4.1), and, more recently, 4.5, which introducedVST Sound as a new way to integrate content into Media Bay. Most of the newfunctionality centred around the new Media Bay, which only reallyhelped you navigate the content that was provided by Steinberg, andVST3, an update to Steinberg’s plug-in technology that was initiallyunavailable to third-party developers. Unlike the earlier versions of Cubase SX, whichadded interesting tools for musicians to embrace, Cubase 4, if I’mbeing honest, just didn’t seem that exciting to me. Cubase 4, released a little over two yearsago, dropped the ‘SX’ suffix, returning the product to its originalname once again. Since then, Steinberg have been consistentlyimproving Cubase alongside their other, more post-production-orientedaudio application, Nuendo. However, that was version 5 of theoriginal Cubase application, the last version released before theintroduction of Cubase SX. It’s been nearly nine years since Sound OnSound last reviewed Cubase 5. ![]()
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