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  1. #1
    GAStronomist DrNomis_44's Avatar
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    You don't necessarily have to win lotto to be able to afford to build a home Studio, Reaper is a good alternative to ProTools, and the makers of Reaper are Ex-ProTools personnel, they offer a $60.00 non-commercial/small business use License, and best of all, once you have paid the $60.00 licensing fee, you get all subsequent software updates, free for life.

  2. #2
    Overlord of Music dave.king1's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by DrNomis_44 View Post
    You don't necessarily have to win lotto to be able to afford to build a home Studio, Reaper is a good alternative to ProTools, and the makers of Reaper are Ex-ProTools personnel, they offer a $60.00 non-commercial/small business use License, and best of all, once you have paid the $60.00 licensing fee, you get all subsequent software updates, free for life.
    Not quite true Doc, you get the incremental updates within the release free but you now pay a further $60US for each major update.

    I went from 3.x to 4.x for free probably because I joined the game on the cusp or R4 release but had to pay to go to 5.x which as of a couple of days ago is up to 5.2.8

    I decided to try Reaper because I was sick of fighting with Cubase and have no intention of going Mac, I'm getting surprisingly good results from a very basic DAW setup.

    I have the current release of Reaper on a cheap Vista laptop that I take to rehearsal and then add tracks and polish on the very grunty Win 10 machine in my office.

    The mixer is a small USB Peavey and I use Senheiser & Shure mics, generally DI guitar and bass although I do rarely stick a mic in front of an amp for a different dynamic.

    Certainly not a professional setup but I am getting good feedback and an album will come out of it in the next 6 months, would be quicker but the three of us have domestic responsibilities that mean we get about 4 hours together each week to collaborate.

    I then spend about an hour a day multi tracking guitars and balancing tracks before going back to add the vocals with the other guys

  3. #3
    GAStronomist DrNomis_44's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dave.king1 View Post
    Not quite true Doc, you get the incremental updates within the release free but you now pay a further $60US for each major update.

    I went from 3.x to 4.x for free probably because I joined the game on the cusp or R4 release but had to pay to go to 5.x which as of a couple of days ago is up to 5.2.8




    I decided to try Reaper because I was sick of fighting with Cubase and have no intention of going Mac, I'm getting surprisingly good results from a very basic DAW setup.

    I have the current release of Reaper on a cheap Vista laptop that I take to rehearsal and then add tracks and polish on the very grunty Win 10 machine in my office.

    The mixer is a small USB Peavey and I use Senheiser & Shure mics, generally DI guitar and bass although I do rarely stick a mic in front of an amp for a different dynamic.

    Certainly not a professional setup but I am getting good feedback and an album will come out of it in the next 6 months, would be quicker but the three of us have domestic responsibilities that mean we get about 4 hours together each week to collaborate.

    I then spend about an hour a day multi tracking guitars and balancing tracks before going back to add the vocals with the other guys

    They must have changed things with the upgrades, cause I didn't have to pay anything to upgrade from Reaper 4 to Reaper 5, maybe my situation was similar to yours, or maybe I just forgot.

  4. #4
    Overlord of Music dave.king1's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by DrNomis_44 View Post
    You don't necessarily have to win lotto to be able to afford to build a home Studio, Reaper is a good alternative to ProTools, and the makers of Reaper are Ex-ProTools personnel, they offer a $60.00 non-commercial/small business use License, and best of all, once you have paid the $60.00 licensing fee, you get all subsequent software updates, free for life.
    After a bit of reading it would appear that we a both sort of right about the cost of Reaper.

    For your $60US you get the release you buy up to x.99 and then the following release from x.01 - x.99 but then have to stunk up for the next two releases and so on.

    So in my case I purchased at 3.xx and got 4.xx with the full series of updates included and then had to pay to go to R5.xx

    Should now be fully funded until R7.x comes out unless they change the business model.

    I'm currently getting some pretty good results with Reaper and my very basic setup

    Click image for larger version. 

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    The Squier Thinline, STA-1 & Yamaha bass are the main weapons of choice
    Click image for larger version. 

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    In the band room I'm using the same little Peavey mixer & Senheiser mic with a laptop
    Last edited by dave.king1; 20-11-2016 at 10:42 AM.

  5. #5
    GAStronomist DrNomis_44's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dave.king1 View Post
    After a bit of reading it would appear that we a both sort of right about the cost of Reaper.

    For your $60US you get the release you buy up to x.99 and then the following release from x.01 - x.99 but then have to stunk up for the next two releases and so on.

    So in my case I purchased at 3.xx and got 4.xx with the full series of updates included and then had to pay to go to R5.xx

    Should now be fully funded until R7.x comes out unless they change the business model.

    I'm currently getting some pretty good results with Reaper and my very basic setup

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	Studio_3_zpsspihskn1.jpg 
Views:	447 
Size:	90.3 KB 
ID:	15127
    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	Studio_2_zps54qyrayz.jpg 
Views:	443 
Size:	109.8 KB 
ID:	15128
    The Squier Thinline, STA-1 & Yamaha bass are the main weapons of choice
    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	Studio_1_zpsvl1nz9uf.jpg 
Views:	437 
Size:	109.7 KB 
ID:	15129

    In the band room I'm using the same little Peavey mixer & Senheiser mic with a laptop

    My experience has been a bit different, basically, I'd go to launch the Reaper software, then I'd get a notice saying that a new version is available, so I download it and then go through the installation process, and then I register it using my existing registration file, so far I haven't had to pay an additional $60.00, maybe I haven't updated to a version that does require paying an extra $60.00, I don't know, to be honest, I haven't done much with Reaper yet, because of the learning-curve, I've mostly used FL Studio or Ableton Live 9 Standard.

    I just did the upgrade from version 5.21.1, to version 5.28, and I didn't have to purchase a new $60.00 license, probably because I purchased one when I installed version 4.xx, the new installation says it is licensed for personal/small business in my name.
    Last edited by DrNomis_44; 20-11-2016 at 05:00 PM.

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