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More juice for the fruity DAW
Computer Music, Tue 27 Oct 2009, 3:25 pm UTC
As we mentioned, many of the improvements to FL9 have been made under the hood, and although they might not be as exciting as fancy new plug-ins, they're important in making FL Studio a swifter, more powerful program.
Fruity Limiter and the Mixer both now make sidechain routing a whole lot easier, for example, and the Fruity Wrapper channel can now take full advantage of third-party plug-ins with more than two outputs.
The Playlist gets a minor overhaul to include track names and icons, mute switches, clip grouping and its own play button. Meanwhile, the new 'volatile linking' feature enables hardware controllers to link to the last parameter adjusted by the mouse.
FL Studio already supported multicore processing for instruments, but FL9 introduces long-awaited support for multicore effects processing. This is a huge improvement over FL8, enabling effects to work more efficiently thanks to multithreading.
The minimum system requirements remain relatively modest, and there's full support for Boot Camp on Macs (although you could say that about any Windows application, so no surprise there).
There are a few glaring omissions, though. For one, it's hard to believe that plug-in delay compensation (PDC) still has to be adjusted manually when just about every other DAW does it automatically. There's also still no dedicated freeze function.
On a more positive note, with a list of bug-fixes and minor enhancements as long as your arm, FL9 should be more stable than any previous version and, indeed, we found it to be rock solid, handling everything we threw at it.
Image-Line offers FL Studio packages at price points to suit every pocket. The complete Signature Edition (reviewed here) costs $299, while the next step down, Producer Edition ($199), loses a few plug-ins - most notably the Maximus multiband compressor/limiter, Hardcore guitar effects, Sytrus synth and DirectWave sampler. If you can live without those, Producer Edition is great value.
At $99, Fruity Edition is still a complete DAW with piano roll features, but it doesn't offer audio recording capabilities or more advanced features like Slicex and Edison for audio manipulation.
Finally, Express Edition ($49) has a greatly reduced feature-set and lacks piano roll and audio recording capabilities - it's less of a fully-fledged DAW, but still includes a step sequencer, arpeggiator and MIDI support.
Whichever package you go for, though, Image-Line will give you free upgrades for life. Boxed versions are available, but they're more expensive and don't entitle you to subsequent free upgrades. Strange…
It's been clear since the days of the original FruityLoops that the FL Studio concept isn't for everyone - it's different to other DAWs and seems to divide opinion. Most current FL Studio users will receive v9 for free, and while it's not a massive update, they surely won't be disappointed.
The real issue is whether it's enough to attract newcomers to the FL Studio stable. If you haven't yet, we strongly recommend that you give it a try - you may be surprised at the powerful punch it packs.
It's perhaps not as immediately impressive an update as FL8 was, but this is another solid step up for the fabulously fruity DAW.
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Excellent new vocoder plug-in. Mid/side stereo processing. Sidechaining capabilities. Multithreading for effects plug-ins.
No automatic PDC or freezing. Is it enough to tempt new users to FL? Demo versions are not "new features"!
It's perhaps not as immediately impressive an update as FL8 was, but this is another solid step up for the fabulously fruity DAW.
All MusicRadar's reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.






FL Studio 9