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Steinberg's Cubase VST 5.1
Ian Waugh reports that 5.1 has been released
with lots of new goodies to excite existing users and tempt new
ones.
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Product |
Cubase VST 5.1 |
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From |
Steinberg |
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Web |
www.steinberguk.com |
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www.steinberg.net
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Contact |
Arbiter |
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Tel |
020 8970 1909 |
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Prices |
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VST |
£269.99 |
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VST Score |
£399.99 |
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VST/32 |
£529.99 |
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Upgrade from VST 5.0 |
Free |
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Rating |
9/10 |
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Requirements |
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PC |
Pentium (Pentium III
or AMD K7 recommended), 266MHz, (450MHz recommended), 128Mb RAM(
256Mb recommended), fast EIDE HD ((faster EIDE/Ultra DMA or SCSI
HD recommended), Windows 98/Me/2000 |
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Mac |
PowerMac 604e
processor (G3 recommended), 200MHz (266MHz recommended), 128Mb
RAM (256Mb recommended), OS 8.6 or higher |
It's quite a while since we looked at Steinberg's
Cubase VST. The last major version was 5.0 but now 5.1 has been
released with lots of new goodies to excite existing users and tempt
new ones.
Most musicians will be familiar with the Cubase
family. It's one of the Big Boys in the MIDI/digital audio
sequencing field and arguably the most popular program of its type
in the Western world, certainly in Europe.

There's simply not room to even list VST's main
features so we won't try. Essentially, it allows you to combine MIDI
and audio tracks on the same Arrange page, it includes both a MIDI
mixer and a sophisticated audio mixer which support automation which
enables you to program fader and control movements which will take
place in real time during playback, a bit like the big motorised
mixing desks you find in major studios.
It comes with numerous plug-in effects and several
virtual instruments so it's possible to create complete pieces
without requiring any external music hardware.
It has event list, piano roll, drum, controller and
tempo editors, plus a good score editor with VST Score having more
sophisticated scoring facilities suitable for arranging and printing
music. All versions of VST support 24-bit digital audio recording
while VST/32 supports 32-bit recording for those who require the
highest audio quality. It also supports up to 128 audio channels
(the others support 72) for those really bi-i-i-g projects.
With version 5.1 Steinberg has added eight new
effects, three new filters and three new virtual instruments. It has
also been optimised for Pentium III and IV processors and also, at
last, for the AMD Athlon and AltiVec which will please fans of these
low-price/high performance chips no end!
Here's a few words about the new features.
Effects
Mysterizer. Moving the mouse around the window and
apply effects such as ring modulation, delay, filters and distortion
to the sound. Very much a hands-on effect.
Vocoder. With control over 24 bands and eight-voice
synth, you can create interesting metallic and robotic vocals plus
many more effects Tip - try running a drum track through it.
BitCrusher. Reduce the number of bits in a sample
for truly awful/highly authentic low res sounds. Industrial fans get
grinding.
MIDI Gate. Mutes audio signals below a certain
volume. Use with audio and MIDI signals to create rhythmic grooves
and effects. Techno chicks check in here.
subBass. Adds low-pitched bass frequencies to audio.
Watch your speakers and the windows. Great for Dance.
DaTube. Tube amp simulation, ranging from da valve
distortion to da ultra clean.
Rotary. Rotary speaker simulator. Just what your
organ needs!
Ring Modulator. One of the originals analogue synth
stalwarts for creating metallic sounds.
Filters
PhatSync. A multi-mode filter with two 16-step
patterns for cutoff and resonance parameters for creating
filter-based rhythmic effects. If you like the MIDI Gate you'll love
this!
MIDI Comb. A comb filter which creates short delays
controlled via MIDI.
Autopole. Two separate miltimode filters that can be
controlled via an LFO or an envelope for effect ranging from the
sublime to the extreme. The plot thickens.
Virtual instruments.
JX16. A 16-voice, two-oscillator analogue synth with
filters, glide and chorus effect.
CD-40. A simple six-voice synth.
LM•7. A new drum machine member of the LM•X family
with 12 drum pads and individual volume and tune controls for each.
Software watchers will have noticed that the price
of VST has come down significantly, too - £70 off the standard
version, £100 off Score and £120 off VST/32. Doubtless is a shrewd
marketing ploy to undercut the competition and attract more users.
But however you look at it, the customer wins!
Existing VST 5.0 users can upgrade to 5.1 free of
charge. The files are on the Web but they are a rather hefty 30Mb
for the Windows version and 24Mb for the Mac version. If you're not
on ISDN or ADSL you may prefer to buy and update CD for a small
charge from your Steinberg distributor.
Although VST 5.1 has no major changes (other than
optimisation for processors other than Intel's), it does have a shed
load of new goodies making the program even more self-contained,
interesting and exciting to use. And some of the additions are truly
class acts.
Cubase has long been a powerful, professional and
highly-regarded program. Existing 5.0 users have no reason not to
upgrade to 5.1 and anyone who has yet to take the plunge now has
lots more reasons for making Cubase VST their sequencer of choice.
^top
Ian Waugh
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