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Studio Pro 8 - Discussion Thread

All installs are pointed to a unique folder - by default. You can of course change it to whatever you want (not recommended tho)



If you have BOTH 7 and 8 Installed - you can use both the fullest as always. If it were me - I would be saving my v8 projects into a slightly different area - just for general housekeeping. But all existing songs (by software version) should be good to go



If you open a v7 project in v8 and hit Save - without doing anything else - and choose Yes (after all the warnings you will get) - your v7 project is no more and will now only ever open in v8.

Conversely - yes - you could open a v7 project in v8 - and do a Save As and redirect the whole thing to a completely new folder - preserving both versions.

But if it was me - I would copy ALL v7 song structures (including ALL files) into a new "v8" master folder and only use these in v8.

Then you know you will have a way back to the original v7 version - should you need it.

VP
Thanks, I have the DAW structured with different folders for different projects so I always change the save folder according to my needs, no problem
 
First questionable statement is "I think some people are over reacting about this." Unfortunately, your contention that people who disagree with you are wrong isn't particularly helpful on any level.

Secondly, Guitar Rig and Ampire appear on few people's list of favorite guitar sims, so beating those out in your mind doesn't take much.

Third, you say you don't even play guitar, yet you want us to honor your opinions about sims, which makes no sense. Perhaps other people come into your studio and use your sims?

Fourth, apparently you love all guitar sims despite not being a guitar player, so loving the new Fender ones doesn't differentiate them in any way from the pack.
I use the guitar amp sims with virtual guitars and they sound excellent. We don't have to agree, and I never said that people that disagree with me are wrong. It's my opinion that some people are over reacting. My bet is that we will see Studio Pro 8 come to be a fantastic upgrade as they continue to develop updates and upgrades.

But like I said, I am not going to continue this argument, but I did want to respond to a few direct things you said to me, but I will no longer respond to you on this thread at least regarding this topic. I'm not here to argue.
 
Still not quite sure where you are confirming this. We have no idea what their plans are for MIDI 2 - but I am pretty sure that just because Fender is not front and center on some MIDI website marketing list of "Preferred" vendors - does not mean they are ignorant of this tech.

Also pretty sure - especially during this last 12-18 months - Fendersonus has had much more important things on their plate - like the global rebranding of a new acquisition that occurred 5 years ago.

I am willing to overlook MIDI 2 in favor of seeing my (still) favorite DAW continue to grow.

We need to remember - there is a LOT going on over there - probably not a good time to read too much into any one area.

VP
You keep going back and forth between being Buddhist about the fact the NI S61 mkIII still boxed in your closet doesn't work properly with the software formerly known as Studio One and being definitely concerned about it. One post you have the infinite patience of a zen master, the next you wonder why this snafu hasn't been ironed out already.

I will freely concede that it takes time to insure that the word "Fender" is embedded on every bit of software from the main program to the included VSTs and every trace of the word "Presonus" is wiped out from every hardware device. That does take a lot of work :)

Maybe I'll get in the spirit and apply a Fender decal to my Presonus MP20.
 
I use the guitar amp sims with virtual guitars and they sound excellent.
That's a new one on me! While we may disagree, I'm happy you're happy with the new release. It's not like I can't see some people being happy with guitar orientation.
 
You keep going back and forth between being Buddhist about the fact the NI S61 mkIII still boxed in your closet doesn't work properly with the software formerly known as Studio One and being definitely concerned about it. One post you have the infinite patience of a zen master, the next you wonder why this snafu hasn't been ironed out already.

Hardly Buddhist or even close to being concerned about this being "ironed out".

Yes - I made a reference to the fact the v8 has not yet addressed this new firmware. And yes - it was slightly disappointing to find that out - but I was over it in 5 minutes.

All that discovery did was inject a sense of relief- as now I have "X" more months of time for planning. My migration plans for 2026 are extensive - it is not something that can ever be taken lightly (completely rebuilding the entire DAW structure) as I have clients to tend to.

So NOT having that MKIII update available to me - right now - is actually a good thing.

I cannot proceed until all the pieces make it worthwhile as there is no version of migration that includes the MKII I have now.

If/when Fender decides to support the MKIII fully - is fine by me.

VP
 
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Can you confirm that the software is separate and that I can save with both 7 and 8, and that I can save projects in the same folder where I save Studio One projects?
Or if I open a 7 project with 8, do I have to save it in a different folder to avoid any issues?
For clarity my computer isn't fooled it knows this is now fender:censored:

Breakdown of where things are installed.

If you accept the defaults when installing Ver 8 it installs to...
C:/Program Files/Fender
and no longer under a Presonus folder.

The installer also creates a User folder in...
C:/Users/... your name.../AppData/Roaming/Fender

The Ver 7 and other SO1 installs are left intact in Presonus folders.

Regards folks
 
I couldn´t find a way to make the circle of fifth available. Maybe I miss something....
Same here . . . :(

I tried to make sense of the "new" semicircle thing; but it's not very useful, although there is a way to get it to show 5ths, where if you click on "C" it shows "G" and so forth,

I never used the "Circle of Fifths", mostly because I started playing string bass professionally in the early-1960's and several years later started teaching myself how to play electric guitar (rhythm) and than a decade or so later, lead guitar.

I think the difference regarding not needing the "Circle of Fifths" is that bass player learn the songs "Louie Louie" (The Kinsmen) and "Sleepwalk" (Santo & Johnny), which are the two most-used patterns in what one might call "popular music".

"Louie Louie" has the bass pattern {1, 4, 5}, and the "Sleepwalk" pattern is {1, 6, 4. 5], which is "Louie Louie" but with an Am if the root is "C".

Technically, it's a -3m or whatever, since the second note and chord is lower than the first note and chord rather than higher. It's {C, Am, F, G}, while "Louie Louie" is {C, F, G} when in the key of "C", although it usually was played in "A" by garage bands, using Barre chords.

Flip "Sleepwak" and play it upside-down and the verse is the chords for "Louie Louie" but in a different order {4, 5, 1} as in "Heat Wave" (Martha & The Vandellas), which is the best song for determining how good your "by ear" identification of chord patterns is.

"Heat Wave" also has a reverse "Walk Don't Run" (The Ventures) Intro.

If you can listen to "Heat Wave" and get the chords without needing to experiment, then your "by ear" identifying is excellent! (y)

Bass players learn this stuff and then map it to rhythm guitar; so my initial thinking was that the "Semicircle of Stupidity" might make sense to guitar players; but a simple test provided the clue.

You can click on the "Sleepwalk" chords in the PreSonus Studio One 7.2.3 "Circle of Fifths", and it works without needing to change from Major to minor for the second chord.

However, in the "Semicircle of Stupidity" you can start with C Major but there is no way to get it to play Am without changing if from Major to minor, which pretty much makes it useless.

One might hope there is some type of logic to the way the "Semicircle of Stupidity" works; but after messing with it for an hour or so, nothing logical appeared.

On the good side, if you have Reason 13 (Reason Studios), then there are Rack Extensions that do different types of automagical chord patterns and sequences; and you can run them in Fender Studio Pro 8 via the Reason Rack VST.

Learn these four songs intimately ("Louie Louie", "Sleepwalk, "Heat Wave" and "Walk Don't Run"), and it's the chord pattern for every popular song of the 20th century, with a few variations, of course. At the time, these were monaural, which is the best way to study them.

Prior to "Walk Don't Run" drummers played Big Band style drum rolls; but this changed with "Walk Don't Run" and a while later with the way Ringo Starr (Beatles) does rimshots and drum rolls. So the style earlier was like Buddy Rich and Gene Krupa played drums, but then it changed to the session drummer on "Walk Don't Run" and then Ringo Starr.

[NOTE: For the younger folks, there was and continues to be a "naughty" version of the lyrics for "Louie Louie", although nobody actually knows the best version of the "naughty" lyrics. History suggests J. Edgar Hoover (Director of the FBI) was obsessed with determining whether the lyrics for "Louie Louie" were communistic, obscene, or risqué; but after having FBI Special Agents study the song for two years, they realized there literally was no possible way to determine what the actual lyrics are, let along the various "naughty" versions; but the other side of the coin is that the lead singer for every junior high school "garage band" had a version of the "naughty" lyrics, which clearly included the phrase, "f--- your girl all kinds of ways", and was how things worked in the early-1960's. The other clue maps to "every night at ten". This was nearly too much FUN for teenage boys, and the teenage girls thought it was funny, too. it was a big hit song, all because the singer mumbled the lyrics. 🤪 ]

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That's a new one on me! While we may disagree, I'm happy you're happy with the new release. It's not like I can't see some people being happy with guitar orientation.
I know this isn't the place we would normally post content we create, but since you said virtual guitars are a new one for you, here is a cover of a Trans Siberian Orchestra song that I did. Yes, it's Christmas, but it's my latest released song. All keyboard with all virtual instruments. No loops. No pre-fab audio. All played on keys by me.

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Prior to "Walk Don't Run" drummers played Big Band style drum rolls; but this changed with "Walk Don't Run" and a while later with the way Ringo Starr (Beatles) does rimshots and drum rolls. So the style earlier was like Buddy Rich and Gene Krupa played drums, but then it changed to the session drummer on "Walk Don't Run" and then Ringo Starr.
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Same here . . . :(

I tried to make sense of the "new" semicircle thing; but it's not very useful, although there is a way to get it to show 5ths, where if you click on "C" it shows "G" and so forth,

I never used the "Circle of Fifths", mostly because I started playing string bass professionally in the early-1960's and several years later started teaching myself how to play electric guitar (rhythm) and than a decade or so later, lead guitar.

I think the difference regarding not needing the "Circle of Fifths" is that bass player learn the songs "Louie Louie" (The Kinsmen) and "Sleepwalk" (Santo & Johnny), which are the two most-used patterns in what one might call "popular music".

"Louie Louie" has the bass pattern {1, 4, 5}, and the "Sleepwalk" pattern is {1, 6, 4. 5], which is "Louie Louie" but with an Am if the root is "C".

Technically, it's a -3m or whatever, since the second note and chord is lower than the first note and chord rather than higher. It's {C, Am, F, G}, while "Louie Louie" is {C, F, G} when in the key of "C", although it usually was played in "A" by garage bands, using Barre chords.

Flip "Sleepwak" and play it upside-down and the verse is the chords for "Louie Louie" but in a different order {4, 5, 1} as in "Heat Wave" (Martha & The Vandellas), which is the best song for determining how good your "by ear" identification of chord patterns is.

"Heat Wave" also has a reverse "Walk Don't Run" (The Ventures) Intro.

If you can listen to "Heat Wave" and get the chords without needing to experiment, then your "by ear" identifying is excellent! (y)

Bass players learn this stuff and then map it to rhythm guitar; so my initial thinking was that the "Semicircle of Stupidity" might make sense to guitar players; but a simple test provided the clue.

You can click on the "Sleepwalk" chords in the PreSonus Studio One 7.2.3 "Circle of Fifths", and it works without needing to change from Major to minor for the second chord.

However, in the "Semicircle of Stupidity" you can start with C Major but there is no way to get it to play Am without changing if from Major to minor, which pretty much makes it useless.

One might hope there is some type of logic to the way the "Semicircle of Stupidity" works; but after messing with it for an hour or so, nothing logical appeared.

On the good side, if you have Reason 13 (Reason Studios), then there are Rack Extensions that do different types of automagical chord patterns and sequences; and you can run them in Fender Studio Pro 8 via the Reason Rack VST.

Learn these four songs intimately ("Louie Louie", "Sleepwalk, "Heat Wave" and "Walk Don't Run"), and it's the chord pattern for every popular song of the 20th century, with a few variations, of course. At the time, these were monaural, which is the best way to study them.

Prior to "Walk Don't Run" drummers played Big Band style drum rolls; but this changed with "Walk Don't Run" and a while later with the way Ringo Starr (Beatles) does rimshots and drum rolls. So the style earlier was like Buddy Rich and Gene Krupa played drums, but then it changed to the session drummer on "Walk Don't Run" and then Ringo Starr.

[NOTE: For the younger folks, there was and continues to be a "naughty" version of the lyrics for "Louie Louie", although nobody actually knows the best version of the "naughty" lyrics. History suggests J. Edgar Hoover (FBI) was obsessed with determining whether the lyrics for "Louie Louie" were communists or risqué, but after having FBI Special Agents study the song for days or weeks, they realized there literally is no possible way to determine what they actual lyrics are, let along the various "naughty" versions; but the other side of the coin is that the lead singer for every junior high school "garage band" had a version of the "naughty" lyrics, which clearly included the phrase, "f--- your girl all kinds ways", which was the way things worked in the early-1960's. The other clue maps to "every night at ten". This was nearly too much FUN for teenage boys, and the teenage girls thought it was funny, too. it was a big hit song, all because the singer mumbled the lyrics. 🤪 ]

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I´m a drummer since 40 years and music teacher since 33 years and know my way around a keyboard, so I usually don´t need all of the chord track stuff to compose/arrange or for all the theory stuff. I also don´t need the AI thing for finding chords. The circle of fifth in the chord selector was just a very convenient, quick way to go through some chord changes when no keyboard was at hand. This option is now gone, sadly
 
I know this isn't the place we would normally post content we create, but since you said virtual guitars are a new one for you, here is a cover of a Trans Siberian Orchestra song that I did. Yes, it's Christmas, but it's my latest released song. All keyboard with all virtual instruments. No loops. No pre-fab audio. All played on keys by me.

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I'm sure Jesus would approve :)

It's not so much the concept of virtual guitars is new to me, more like ones played through amp sims. I would have thought the samples already came treated or there was provision within the app.
 
You mean there might be a DAW out there that can both be beginner friendly and pro level at the same time? What a concept!
Hmm, In theory sure, in practice? Rarely happens.
Name one application that achieves this fully.

Simplifying UX/UI experience for noobies while at the same time developing advanced toolsets for advanced users is incredibly expensive and difficult to do, for the simple reason that development resources have to be aimed somewhere, and you can't aim them in the hobbyist direction without diverting resources away from advanced features/users.

Possible? Yes.
Extremely expensive/difficult/unlikely/unprecedented?
Absolutely.
 
See, I like the single click thing to open my plug-ins as well, HOWEVER, until I get used to this, it's a 5 click.

2 times because I forget, and it opens the stupid mini thing that seriously...nobody uses, but Gregor REALLY loved it when it first came out.
2 more times to close that stupid thing that nobody but Gregor liked...
1 time to open the plug-in, which now Gregor seems to really like and thinks it's super convenient.

Still, love Gregor's (and Joe's) videos though. Just giving him a rough time that he will likely never see anyway.
I would be on board with an option to disable that mini drop down control...never use it and am constantly needing to collapse it.
 
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I know this isn't the place we would normally post content we create, but since you said virtual guitars are a new one for you, here is a cover of a Trans Siberian Orchestra song that I did. Yes, it's Christmas, but it's my latest released song. All keyboard with all virtual instruments. No loops. No pre-fab audio. All played on keys by me.

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For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
Just wanted to say I enjoyed listening to your cover! Programming virtual guitar well is not easy. I appreciate how deep the impact soundworks guitars go...nice to hear argent in action. I have hydra and once I setup sound variations for it, programming has been a much more enjoyable experience. Typically use it with a neural dsp nolly x, or for heavier stuff, otto audio eleven. I also get alot of use out of KeepForest Appex. I use more of the onboard sounds for that guitar than others, which I always run through amp Sims. Just sounds better and more control.

Shifting more on topic for the group/thread re: Studio Pro (SP):

I have yet to try out the new native amp sims for guitar and bass. Am curious about latency, as the amp Sims I use can be quite heavy on resources. Could be nice for tracking...idk. Looking forward to experimenting.

I am optimistic about the sound...And they, along with all the included fx pedals, need not be limited to use only on live or virtual guitars. I know plenty of folks making creative use of guitar fx and amps on all kinds of instruments. Im excited to try on electric violin, for example.
 
New member here. Currently have Studio One 6 and heard about the new major update to Fender Studio 8.

Went to sweetwater and found an upgrade for only $99, and got that.

I have the license key now, but.. I cannot find where to download the installer. I've logged in to the new Fender site and see all of my old Presonus orders/products, but of course Studio 8 isn't listed there since I got the license form Sweetwater (and later saw where I could get the same license from Fender for the same price, ugh)

I've looked all over the My Gear section as well as the public facing Studio 8 page and cannot see where to download the installer.

Sweetwater's instructions only pertain to entering the license key, and they do not have links to download the installer directly. Support is referring me to Fender.

I am beyond miffed.

Anyone have any useful or helpful info on getting the installer? I don't really want to spend another $99 for a second license just because I couldn't find the installer.
 
New member here. Currently have Studio One 6 and heard about the new major update to Fender Studio 8.

Went to sweetwater and found an upgrade for only $99, and got that.

I have the license key now, but.. I cannot find where to download the installer. I've logged in to the new Fender site and see all of my old Presonus orders/products, but of course Studio 8 isn't listed there since I got the license form Sweetwater (and later saw where I could get the same license from Fender for the same price, ugh)

I've looked all over the My Gear section as well as the public facing Studio 8 page and cannot see where to download the installer.

Sweetwater's instructions only pertain to entering the license key, and they do not have links to download the installer directly. Support is referring me to Fender.

I am beyond miffed.

Anyone have any useful or helpful info on getting the installer? I don't really want to spend another $99 for a second license just because I couldn't find the installer.
Hi, I went through almost the same thing, couldn't find the new installer file.

It show up when I logged onto "my.fender.com". Once I logged on to the correct site, the link was there on the main page. Perhaps try "my.fender.com"? Worked for me.
 
Hi, I went through almost the same thing, couldn't find the new installer file.

It show up when I logged onto "my.fender.com". Once I logged on to the correct site, the link was there on the main page. Perhaps try "my.fender.com"? Worked for me.

I've looked all over, the only links to go this:

1768610674937.png


The Register Here form does not recognize the License Key purchased from Sweetwater, hence my delimma.
 
I've looked all over, the only links to go this:

View attachment 2790

The Register Here form does not recognize the License Key purchased from Sweetwater, hence my delimma.
Yeah, something is squirrely with the Fender sites. They may have botched the account migration in my opinion, or I messed up linking my account.

I was logging onto to my old Fender site that I've had for years and couldn't find it. It wasn't showing any Presonus products that I'd purchased either.

So, I created a new logon with my.fender.com. That's when it showed up, and all my Presonus stuff is there too. I've since deleted my former old Fender account.

Don't know if this will help.
 
Yeah, something is squirrely with the Fender sites. They may have botched the account migration in my opinion, or I messed up linking my account.

I was logging onto to my old Fender site that I've had for years and couldn't find it. It wasn't showing any Presonus products that I'd purchased either.

So, I created a new logon with my.fender.com. That's when it showed up, and all my Presonus stuff is there too. I've since deleted my former old Fender account.

Don't know if this will help.
I'm following up only to let this be a warning for anyone else thinking of upgrading via a license key purchased from a third party.

The instructions on the link you provided right above say to find the product I just bought and then obtain the download there. I did not buy the product (upgrad) from Fender, it was bought from Sweetwater. Therefore, Fender doesn't know I have it, and the Studio 8 product is not listed under my products.

I have no actual way to download this software.

Sweetwater put me into a support queue and said the wait would be long. I later found out wasn't being staffed at all, so I would have waited hours and nobody there would have answered.

The migration from Presonus to Fender made this upgrade path more confusing than it needed to be, and Sweetwater should not be offering license keys for products they cannot themselves provide (and which license keys are said to be invalid when I enter them at Fender's website)
 
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