If I am mastering something all "in the box" then I skip REAPER and use only WaveLab after I have cleaned up any issues in RX6 standalone. ![]() ![]() Where WaveLab excels is creating and exporting all the various master formats you may need. I mostly use WaveLab to assemble my captured/trimmed/cleaned audio and do all the sequencing, small touch-ups, and final digital limiting/dither etc. I do think it's weakness is the analog routing and the global master section so I've developed a workflow where I don't use the global master section or the external gear plugin.įor the analog processing (usually with some plugins inserted before going analog to sweeten things), I just use REAPER because it's perfect for this part of the process. I never have to use another app after WaveLab for metadata or anything else. Not only does it work well but it also saves me so much time each day. Yeah, I very much like WaveLab 9.5 for the montage features, I can't imagine working daily without it.
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