Here's the way to do it.buy your tickets individually, don't get the all-weekend ticket, and give Saturday daytime Sonar a skip. These people may resent Sonar, but they embrace anybody with open arms.very friendly bunch of people.reminded me of Megatripolis. The DJs at Anti Sonar really kick ass.if you want local talent this is the place to find it! There were also House, Jungle/DnB, Ragga and Indescribable tents.all with a hard vibe.giving endless musical permutations. The Gabba dancefloor was in front of a wall of sound about 10 speakers wide and 7 high. not to be missedĪnti-Sonar should come with a health warning. Gave Sonar a miss on Saturday night and back to Anti Sonar 8:30 Sunday morning. I went down on Friday after Sonar - stayed till 4pm Saturday. No need to bring anything except yourself (and a few bob), the friendly local crusties will sort you out for everything you need (even sun cream at one point). Not just bangin techno DJ's here, deadly Jungle too. Usually located on the outskirts of the city near to the Sonar by Night festival site, follow the crowds or ask around
Expect unrelenting hard techno, and bring your own water, beer, absinthe, and suncream, as you'll be dancing through into the morning. Whereas Sonar attracts a moneyed, trendy, international crowd, Anti-Sonar is an anarchic impromptu festival for the scruffier inhabitants of Barcelona who can't afford or simply resent the festival and the hordes of techno tourists that take over the city for the weekend. Steve austin, this might be worth looking into.Īnti-Sonar is an alternative to Sonar which runs in Barcelona at the same time. hence the application of the "Troll" moniker.Īctually, I think you're earning it quite well.
Your unwillingness to spend some time with the FREE demo tells me you're blowing smoke up our butts. That's great, but you can buy most of them from Cakewalk, I believe, and they'll work just fine in Logic. It sounds like you're considering the move because of the available soft-synths and such. Your reasons for liking Logic are valid, and, frankly, you should keep using it. Been with the Bakers ever since, and it just keeps getting better. It took very little time to get to a point where I felt comfortable working inside it. It was logical, flowed well, and I could do everything I wanted to do quickly. MY results (which sound very different than yours) was that the GUI in Sonar made sense to me. I will admit I had NEVER touched any DAW before this process started, so that was part of the issues I was having with other packages, but. With everything else, I couldn't figure out anything for minutes or hours.
It opened, and 60 seconds later, I was recording. With Sonar 1.3.1, I found I had a breath of fresh air.
I'd do a fresh load of Win 98 or Win 2k (depending on what the software would work with) and load up the DAW of the moment. Cubase, Nuendo, some Magic software, Acid, FL, ProTools LE and PT Free, everything.
Logic (the last PC version) was one of the more convoluted GUI's I looked at.
What I did was download every demo or crack I could find, of everything out there, and spent weeks trying to get each one to work. I'm an old Analog guy, with lots of tape and non-automated mixing experience, so making the change to a computer-based solution was a tough one. If fruityloops is so appropriate for me(and it is a simple program) then you all are admitting that Sonar is complicated, and i get the feeling thats why you don't want to answer my question.ħ years ago, I went looking for the DAW I was going to run in my soon to be built studio. Why does the interface have so may tabs menus and options and different windows. All i want to do is input some midi notes and run a few softsynths and apply a few effects. I am interested in Sonar, but you all will have to prove whether it's worth my money and time, because there seems to be so many tabs to press and pop up menus to navigate that i think it is an over complicated DAW that needs to be simplified. Go look at the interface of Logic intertwined with Apple's OS and it is so clearly laid out and well quite "Logical" really.
The fact that it has a lengthy learning curve of a few months sort of tells me it's a pain in the arse. I need a straightforward detailed answer about how logical and easy Sonar is to use, even once you learn it's particular interface does it have too many navigational unneccesary options. The amount of time you all waste trying to rebutt my presence is fu_king rediculous, just answer the question you dopey twirps. Thats why people ask questions, to save time and weeks of learning curves. "go try the demo!" i say fu_k the demo, YOU tell me what Sonar is like. C'mon guys, i still haven't got any useful insightful answers yet.