• November 27, 2021
Bitwig Studio 4.1 adds powerful new Note FX for mangling MIDI

Bitwig Studio 4.1 adds powerful new Note FX for mangling MIDI

Bitwig is still something from beginners in the world of digital audio workstations (DAW), but the level where it continues to improve and expand its strength truly impressive. With the official release of Bitwig Studio 4.1 this company leaned into the type of unexpected and generative music ideas that have been superior.

Great news at 4.1 is a collection of eight new notes that bring a total of 23. It allows you to manipulate MIDI based on per-note, for example by using Arpeggiator. But eight new additions get a little more experimental and some inspiration from the world of physics to provide semi-random results. Dribble, for example, triggers of record based notes simulate bouncing balls, repeat them “until gravity wins.” Ricochet is similar except Careen’s record around “room”, reduced with every collision.

Some new effects actually lean in the other direction and far from randomization. Quantization, for example, is about keeping your notes locked on a knock, even though there are some concessions here through the parameters of “forgiveness”.

A new collection of FX note rounded by humanizing, shuffling, binding, bending, and recording repetition. The strength of this new effect is completely passed when you start combining it. Modular Bitwig nature is part of what makes it so unique, including the grid, its innate sound design environment that allows you to make special instruments and effects.

Bitwig also interferes with soundpack to utilize the added FX called notes in Bloom. In it there is a preset collection that displays a new FX record, including some chained together that “makes your notes playing and detained, dancing, bouncing, and making an interesting rhythm in real time, so you can use it while playing.”

If you have considered trying bitwig, now is the right time to do it. The studio and 16-track are sold until 11 January. The edition of the stripped 16-track was marked up to $ 79, starting at $ 99. While the Full-Fledge Studio version was $ 100 off, carrying the price of only $ 299. While $ 299 was not an impulse purchase area, it was quite cheap in the world of Daws. Even with a 25 percent discount which is quite steep for Black Friday Ableton’s Live 11 suite is $ 562.

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