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TreDay
« The King of Trackers »
Published on 11/11/14 at 07:43Renoise is available for Windows, OS X, and Linux. Installation is a snap, with no dongles or online authentication license managers. After installation, configuration is straightforward--You setup your plugin folders, and ASIO/MIDI devices in the preferences menu and then you’re ready to go. It’s important to note that Renoise only allows you to have 2 folders designated for your plugins which can be a problem if you don’t have all of your plugins installed in only 2 folders.
Learning Renoise couldn’t be easier. Not only does the website have a fully documented wiki that covers every function, there’s also a free official tutorial video series that walks you through the creation of a song. Furthermore, the community has a heritage of sharing their song project files, which you can play back inside Renoise and see everything that was done to produce the song.
SUITABILITY/PERFORMANCE
I’ve owned Renoise for over 2 years and it’s been my sequencer of choice for that duration. Before that, I used trackers like Buzz for a decade as well as more traditional DAWs such as Reaper on occasion. Like Buzz, Renoise is a tracker. In a tracker, you place notes vertically to create patterns and then arrange these patterns to create your song, somewhat similar to Ableton Live’s Session View. Trackers also rely heavily on computer keyboard shortcuts and while at first glance it seems daunting, trackers have an extremely intuitive workflow for sequencing MIDI and sample-oriented music once you're accustomed to the interface. It’s almost like using a hardware sequencer as you quickly input notes by using the arrow keys to go to the line you want and then use your computer or MIDI keyboard to place notes on that line. I find this to be far less tedious than dragging, copying, and tweaking tiny midi blocks on a piano roll.
That said, the tracker interface is not ideal for every kind of song. Because Renoise doesn’t have audio tracks or a linear sequencer, it’s difficult to sequence long audio clips together like multiple live instrument parts. Furthermore, it doesn’t have multitrack recording in any capacity, so recording bands, ensembles, or live drums isn’t possible. Renoise does support ReWire, however, so it is possible to use Renoise for sequencing your soft synths or samples and then rewire Renoise with another DAW that is more suited towards handling recording.
The sample editor in Renoise is fairly robust. You can place markers on drum breaks to slice them, set loop points, record samples through your audio interface, and set key zones to create layered sample based instruments. You can even draw your own waveforms, process them with effects, resample, and then use that as an instrument, essentially creating a completely unique synthesized sound from scratch. There’s built-in capability for modulating sample parameters and there’s a beat sync feature that will automatically transpose and fine tune your samples so that their length syncs to the current BPM, making it easy to achieve that classic pitched up jungle drum sound.
Renoise is capable of loading 3rd party plugins (VST/AU) and has a built-in 32-bit to 64-bit plugin bridge for handling those older plugins. Also included is a standard suite of processing effects, the usual array of EQs, reverbs, compressors and delays. These are all very usable and the cabinet simulator in particular is a favorite of mine. It features 17 emulations of well known guitar amp cabinets and adds some really nice dirt to synths and drums.
The program itself is very responsive. Nothing is bloated or sluggish and I haven’t encountered any CPU spikes or instability. The interface remains snappy, even inside large projects. CPU usage will be dictated by which and how many plugins you use, Renoise doesn't utilize more than 3% on my Intel i5 2500k @ 4.5ghz while idle. A large project featuring 25 tracks and assorted effects might climb up to around 20% while playing, but again, this will vary heavily depending on the plugins you use in your song.
One of the greatest assets for Renoise is the community. They’re active and helpful, even creating powerful free tools with the official scripting language. These tools range from things like arpeggiators and step sequencers to the incredibly useful “Guru,” a tool for programming hardware synths and saving patches (even for synths that don’t have patch memory!) inside Renoise.
Another thing to note is that the developers are very fair when it comes to releasing updates for Renoise. Between Renoise 2.0 and 3.0, the developers released many significant updates for free over the course of 4 years. These updates included things like an Ableton Live style Grid/Pattern Matrix, an official scripting language for user made tools, new effect plugins, and full 64-bit support.
OVERALL OPINION
While it may not come with all of the pack-in synths or gigabytes of sample content that many DAWs boast these days, Renoise is a powerful, stable, and fast sequencer with a great community and a spectacular price at around $90 USD. It's a specialized sequencer with a focus on midi sequencing and small samples, so it's not the kind of program you'd use for every song you might want to produce, but if you’re not satisfied with your current DAW workflow or if you want to try something completely different from the usual big name sequencers, you should definitely give it a try.
Pros:
+ Fast, intuitive tracker-style sequencing
+ Clean interface
+ Bloat-free
+ No dongles or online license managers, you can install it on all of your computers hassle-free
+ Fantastic price
+ Great community that provides useful tools for free
+ Developers are active on the official forums and release multiple substantial free updates
Cons:
- Can only set 2 plugin folders
- Isn't ideal for sequencing numerous long audio clips.
- Doesn't have multitrack recording
Learning Renoise couldn’t be easier. Not only does the website have a fully documented wiki that covers every function, there’s also a free official tutorial video series that walks you through the creation of a song. Furthermore, the community has a heritage of sharing their song project files, which you can play back inside Renoise and see everything that was done to produce the song.
SUITABILITY/PERFORMANCE
I’ve owned Renoise for over 2 years and it’s been my sequencer of choice for that duration. Before that, I used trackers like Buzz for a decade as well as more traditional DAWs such as Reaper on occasion. Like Buzz, Renoise is a tracker. In a tracker, you place notes vertically to create patterns and then arrange these patterns to create your song, somewhat similar to Ableton Live’s Session View. Trackers also rely heavily on computer keyboard shortcuts and while at first glance it seems daunting, trackers have an extremely intuitive workflow for sequencing MIDI and sample-oriented music once you're accustomed to the interface. It’s almost like using a hardware sequencer as you quickly input notes by using the arrow keys to go to the line you want and then use your computer or MIDI keyboard to place notes on that line. I find this to be far less tedious than dragging, copying, and tweaking tiny midi blocks on a piano roll.
That said, the tracker interface is not ideal for every kind of song. Because Renoise doesn’t have audio tracks or a linear sequencer, it’s difficult to sequence long audio clips together like multiple live instrument parts. Furthermore, it doesn’t have multitrack recording in any capacity, so recording bands, ensembles, or live drums isn’t possible. Renoise does support ReWire, however, so it is possible to use Renoise for sequencing your soft synths or samples and then rewire Renoise with another DAW that is more suited towards handling recording.
The sample editor in Renoise is fairly robust. You can place markers on drum breaks to slice them, set loop points, record samples through your audio interface, and set key zones to create layered sample based instruments. You can even draw your own waveforms, process them with effects, resample, and then use that as an instrument, essentially creating a completely unique synthesized sound from scratch. There’s built-in capability for modulating sample parameters and there’s a beat sync feature that will automatically transpose and fine tune your samples so that their length syncs to the current BPM, making it easy to achieve that classic pitched up jungle drum sound.
Renoise is capable of loading 3rd party plugins (VST/AU) and has a built-in 32-bit to 64-bit plugin bridge for handling those older plugins. Also included is a standard suite of processing effects, the usual array of EQs, reverbs, compressors and delays. These are all very usable and the cabinet simulator in particular is a favorite of mine. It features 17 emulations of well known guitar amp cabinets and adds some really nice dirt to synths and drums.
The program itself is very responsive. Nothing is bloated or sluggish and I haven’t encountered any CPU spikes or instability. The interface remains snappy, even inside large projects. CPU usage will be dictated by which and how many plugins you use, Renoise doesn't utilize more than 3% on my Intel i5 2500k @ 4.5ghz while idle. A large project featuring 25 tracks and assorted effects might climb up to around 20% while playing, but again, this will vary heavily depending on the plugins you use in your song.
One of the greatest assets for Renoise is the community. They’re active and helpful, even creating powerful free tools with the official scripting language. These tools range from things like arpeggiators and step sequencers to the incredibly useful “Guru,” a tool for programming hardware synths and saving patches (even for synths that don’t have patch memory!) inside Renoise.
Another thing to note is that the developers are very fair when it comes to releasing updates for Renoise. Between Renoise 2.0 and 3.0, the developers released many significant updates for free over the course of 4 years. These updates included things like an Ableton Live style Grid/Pattern Matrix, an official scripting language for user made tools, new effect plugins, and full 64-bit support.
OVERALL OPINION
While it may not come with all of the pack-in synths or gigabytes of sample content that many DAWs boast these days, Renoise is a powerful, stable, and fast sequencer with a great community and a spectacular price at around $90 USD. It's a specialized sequencer with a focus on midi sequencing and small samples, so it's not the kind of program you'd use for every song you might want to produce, but if you’re not satisfied with your current DAW workflow or if you want to try something completely different from the usual big name sequencers, you should definitely give it a try.
Pros:
+ Fast, intuitive tracker-style sequencing
+ Clean interface
+ Bloat-free
+ No dongles or online license managers, you can install it on all of your computers hassle-free
+ Fantastic price
+ Great community that provides useful tools for free
+ Developers are active on the official forums and release multiple substantial free updates
Cons:
- Can only set 2 plugin folders
- Isn't ideal for sequencing numerous long audio clips.
- Doesn't have multitrack recording