My first main DAW then was SAW, Cubase was not very capable in audio area at that time. Way back you could get Cubase cracked, so everybody tried it by default. Its ability to recognise chords is quite useful to me for composing. However, part of the reason I like Cubase is that the Score Editor is one of the best and works fairly seamlessly with the rest of Cubase. Score: Keep in mind that the Score Editor in Cubase (and in most other DAWs) is limited so don’t expect to have Dorico level features. Also, since the programmers were chasing the latest innovations, it was time consuming to keep up with where everything was. It became very time consuming to keep up with and really started to seem like the software updates were more important to Cakewalk and the users than making music. The monthly update meant that you never really had a stable, up-to-date program since bug fixes and updates were combined. After Sonar moved from X3 to Platinum and started to update monthly it really became awful. I moved back to Cubase after spending 8 years with Sonar and would not think of going back to Sonar. I’ve never really had a situation where it let me down. This means that the user-machine interface doesn’t change a lot over time so once you learn it, you know it. It gets bug fixes when needed and the improvements are incremental. I would happily recommend Cubase Pro to anyone needing a well rounded DAW.
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