

Once launched, you’ll have a handy startup window in front of you that contains shortcuts for different types of projects and the application uses a more or less single-window mode with tabs and menus that are easy to handle. With a de-esser, gate, reverb, limiter, and many other tools, it’s a great choice for everyday mixing tasks. You get a lot of effects too, plus you get the new essentialFX kit, which offers 11 basic effects in a single cover.

Vita is Samplitude’s native samplitude-based instrument, and now you have three new options: the Orchestral Ensemble, Grand Piano and Sansula, the kalimba instrument. There is a good selection of VST plugins, including some brand new models.

You and I can now use up to 32 instruments in a project (twice as many as before), certainly not as much as some of you might need, but enough to render tracks. You get support for 64-bit architecture, multi-core processors and 24-bit, 96 kHz multitrack recording. Naturally the program has some limitations compared to high-performance DAWs, but this software is more accessible to most users and many features that are missing are required by professional users. You will get almost all the features you need to record, mix and edit audio and MIDI files. The system requirements are not the highest, it will work fine even on older PCs only Windows must be at least version 7. MAGIX Samplitude Music Studio – the program is a digital sound workstation of the basic level, which has a large set of features.
