Seven years later I discover this VST. I new it was powerful but I was struggling to unleash it’s power. Thanks to you and your excellent video, I now know how to unleash it’s power. Also £9 is a excellent sale price.
cool video. I have my trouble with Transfuser. I found a good drum/beat and when i hit a key on my midi keyboard it plays in sync. When I hit record button in Cubase and hit a key on midi keyboard thenTransfuser sounds out of sync, it is not right "on the beat" anymore. Anyway Transfuser is a cool creative tool
@@empirestaterecs i tried it but it did not solve the issue. I could also recognize it when i select multiple VST tracks and press Record. The track with Transfuser is more or less out of sync but only when recording
@@empirestaterecs I wish they would. It's a proper workhorse. I'm just learning it now for the first time. I don't mind the design of the UI, it's just that it needs to be able to scale (everything gets larger) and expand (so don't need to scroll as much). I run a 4K display. Don't want to have to drop res. Some DAWs like Reaper have a pixel scaling mode for VSTs but they can cause problems. I'd gladly pay another $50 for the update.
I have just downloaded the trial version. I find it highly unintuitive and difficult to use. It seems to be a very sophisticated machine but I think the creators lacked direction on what they wanted the product to be: sequencer, sampler, drum machine. As a track plugin the first thing you want it to do is be able to drop the final production on your track and here it play independently of the actual plugin surface! Even this is not intuitive. Too many screens, too many play/stop buttons, and when you turn to the user guide for help you discover it's just a promotional material about all the fantastic things each part can do. Nothing about how to set it up, how to slowly build up things, how to create various drum beats (not just presets). Why does the manual begin with "what's new"? How is this going to be interesting for me as a new user? No.... Just another electronic toy, I am afraid!
It is really old - designed for Pro Tools and ported to VST. Its graphics are grainy and it isn't resizable. It also has a fair few bugs and of all their updated plug ins this one remains untouched. That said, when you get the hang of it it really can be useful, to the extent it feels like you are building a tracking using just this.
@@omarsowan4780 I really would encourage you to keep with it. The manual is lacking detail. Some things I like doing is getting a mix of samples going, use the inbuilt recorder to record them, then drag and drop a four bar loop into the daw. Its quite good and has a good swing system too. You can even record from your daw into it and then mangle it to apply FX, then drag it back into the daw.
Seven years later I discover this VST. I new it was powerful but I was struggling to unleash it’s power.
Thanks to you and your excellent video, I now know how to unleash it’s power.
Also £9 is a excellent sale price.
100%
Very very useful tutorial. Great work!
Cheers pal.
Now available for £25. I’ve been having great fun with it since getting my copy in the spring.
Great Tim! It is fun don't you think?
Is it possible to export the midi from Transfuser back into our DAW?
Yes, the midi that you draw in is assigned to a key on the keyboard. You drag it to your DAW from the key on the keyboard.
cool video. I have my trouble with Transfuser. I found a good drum/beat and when i hit a key on my midi keyboard it plays in sync. When I hit record button in Cubase and hit a key on midi keyboard thenTransfuser sounds out of sync, it is not right "on the beat" anymore. Anyway Transfuser is a cool creative tool
Have you tried cubase delay compensation?
@@empirestaterecs i tried it but it did not solve the issue. I could also recognize it when i select multiple VST tracks and press Record. The track with Transfuser is more or less out of sync but only when recording
@@matthiasjensenpuchta3542 I don't have the answer, but I wonder if you drag the midi from transfuser to the track in cubase you still get delay
@@empirestaterecs thanks i will try to drag the midi. It might help, will give it a try
@@matthiasjensenpuchta3542 Don't forget drag via the piano keys!
thanks for this - just bought the app for 29 dollars
as for the screen - I 'd just reduce the resolution of my screen
Its great. Needs an update but such a great tool.
@@empirestaterecs I wish they would. It's a proper workhorse. I'm just learning it now for the first time.
I don't mind the design of the UI, it's just that it needs to be able to scale (everything gets larger) and expand (so don't need to scroll as much). I run a 4K display. Don't want to have to drop res. Some DAWs like Reaper have a pixel scaling mode for VSTs but they can cause problems. I'd gladly pay another $50 for the update.
cheers
Thanks
I have just downloaded the trial version. I find it highly unintuitive and difficult to use. It seems to be a very sophisticated machine but I think the creators lacked direction on what they wanted the product to be: sequencer, sampler, drum machine. As a track plugin the first thing you want it to do is be able to drop the final production on your track and here it play independently of the actual plugin surface! Even this is not intuitive. Too many screens, too many play/stop buttons, and when you turn to the user guide for help you discover it's just a promotional material about all the fantastic things each part can do. Nothing about how to set it up, how to slowly build up things, how to create various drum beats (not just presets). Why does the manual begin with "what's new"? How is this going to be interesting for me as a new user? No.... Just another electronic toy, I am afraid!
It is really old - designed for Pro Tools and ported to VST. Its graphics are grainy and it isn't resizable. It also has a fair few bugs and of all their updated plug ins this one remains untouched. That said, when you get the hang of it it really can be useful, to the extent it feels like you are building a tracking using just this.
@@empirestaterecs Thanks for your clarification 👍
@@omarsowan4780 I really would encourage you to keep with it. The manual is lacking detail. Some things I like doing is getting a mix of samples going, use the inbuilt recorder to record them, then drag and drop a four bar loop into the daw. Its quite good and has a good swing system too. You can even record from your daw into it and then mangle it to apply FX, then drag it back into the daw.