THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO USING REWIRE WITH SONAR 2.2 (or higher) & HOME
STUDIO 2004 (or higher) Part 1
Put this powerful protocol to use in your projects
By Craig Anderton with Jesse Jost
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SONAR & Home Studio's ability to work
with ReWire brings exciting new possibilities to already comprehensive
programs. Want to use Project5 or Propellerhead Software's Reason
as a rack of virtual instruments for SONAR or Home Studio? Done.
How about shooting Project5's SYNCHRON 32 or ReBirth's cool drum
and bass line modules into SONAR or Home Studio to get rhythm section
ideas down fast? Easy. Care to integrate the live performance features
of Project5 or Ableton's Live! with backing tracks previously recorded
in SONAR or Home Studio? Sure.
Part 1: ReWire basics, with answers to some
common questions about the ReWire protocol.
Part 2: How to set up SONAR or Home Studio and Project5
or Reason to work together as a ReWired team.
Part 3: Multiple applications, most with step-by-step tutorials,
that cover a variety of aspects that relate to using ReWire to
integrate
Project5 or Reason with SONAR or Home Studio.
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Table of Contents
PART 1: BASIC Q&A
PART 2: SETUP
PART 3: Specific
Applications for Project5
PART 4: Specific Applications
for Reason
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PART 1: BASIC QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
What is ReWire?
ReWire is a software technology that allows two programs to work together
in a tightly integrated way. For example, Propellerhead Software's Reason
is a reasonably-priced "virtual studio" with an a array of soft
synths, samplers, effects, and drum machines. However, because it's a
self-contained software studio, it offers no digital recording capabilities,
doesn't accept plug-ins, and has only a limited number of different signal
processors. Project5, also a self-contained studio, does accept plug-ins
and it offers a wide array of processors, but it too does not offer digital
recording capabilities.
With Project5 or Reason "rewired" into SONAR or Home Studio,
their instrument outputs go into SONAR or Home Studio's mixer and show
up as tracks within the program. MIDI data recorded into SONAR or Home
Studio can flow to Project5 or Reason, thus allowing the various soft
synths to be triggered from within SONAR or Home Studio. Transport functions
are shared, so that starting or stopping one program starts or stops the
other as well.
The programs also run in parallel, so if you have sequences
recorded in Project5 or Reason, you can add digital audio hard disk tracks
in SONAR or Home Studio. Conversely, songs recorded in SONAR or Home Studio
can take advantage of Project5's or Reason's soft synths to augment the
arrangement.
Reason instruments can go through SONAR or Home Studio's DirectX processors,
and of course, you can still use DXi devices to expand the soft synth
possibilities even further.
Because Project5 is an open system, you can use its included effects
and synths, or any DirectX, DXi, VST, or VSTi plug-in loaded on your system.
And you have the added flexibility of running instruments from Project5
through SONAR or Home Studio's DirectX processors and even their auxiliaries
where you can submix your Project5 tracks alongside recorded audio. In
addition all of Project5's synths and effects show up directly in SONAR
and Home Studio and you can use them independently of the Project5 application.
Who's Behind ReWire?
ReWire started with Propellerhead Software, but has since become a true
industry standard. SONAR's, Home Studio's, and Project5's embrace of ReWire
has taken this level of acceptance even further; more ReWire compatible
applications are appearing, and some pre-ReWire applications (such as
Arturia's Storm and Image-Line's FruityLoops) are being updated for ReWire
compatibility.
Can My Computer Handle ReWire?
ReWire itself doesn't use up much CPU power; it is simply an interconnection
protocol. However, by definition you'll be using two programs together,
so your computer needs enough power to run them both comfortably. Generally,
this means a decent amount of RAM (e.g., 512 MB) and a fast processor
(1 GHz will work fine, although a slower one can work if you don't make
too many demands on it).
Software synthesizers tend to require a lot of CPU power, as do signal
processors. However, there are ways to reduce the amount of CPU power
needed, as covered later in this document.
Must I Use WDM Drivers for my Sound Card?
Although ReWire will work with SONAR or Home Studio using MME drivers,
WDM or ASIO drivers provide greatly increased efficiency and far lower
latency (i.e., the delay between the time you trigger a note, and when
you actually hear it). WDM drivers are highly recommended. Check your
sound card manufacturer's web site to see if WDM drivers are available
for your card. Using SONAR without WDM is like driving a Porsche without
ever getting out of second gear you can do it, but why would you
want to?
Do I Need to Install any Additional Hardware or Software?
ReWire is an entirely software-based function that is built within ReWire-compatible
programs. There may be a few rules you need to follow, like closing or
opening programs in a particular order, but no drivers or other software
accessories are needed.
It Seems Pretty Inconvenient that the ReWire Application
and SONAR Can't Share MIDI I/O
That's what the documentation says, but it's being way too conservative.
I use Reason and SONAR together and have no trouble driving SONAR when
it has the focus, and Reason when it has the focus. We'll cover how to
do MIDI assignments later, but the bottom line is you can play notes in
Reason using the same MIDI port and connections that you use to record
notes in SONAR or Home Studio.
Is ReWire Difficult to Use?
Thankfully, no. SONAR's ReWire implementation is excellent (it has even
been praised by Propellerhead Software), and it's quite easy to use. And
Home Studio 2004's ReWire support is identical to the ReWire support found
in SONAR 2.2. Of course, you'll be working with two programs instead of
one, but if you know how to work them, using ReWire isn't difficult at
all.
This All Sounds Too Good to Be True
Welcome to the 21st century! Yes, you can have it all - digital recording,
extensive MIDI editing, DXi devices, Reason soft synths, signal processing
plug-ins, dual sequencers, sample-accurate synching
it really is
pretty remarkable.
Continue on to Part 2: Setup
Skip to Part 3: Applications for Project5
Skip to Part 4: Applications for Reason
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