^ "Used on demos for Disintegration (The Cure album)".^ "'62 Strat, '86 Fernandes Brad Gillis Model, a Gibson Moderne and More".^ Renzetti.html "DPUser Update: Joe Renzetti".
^ "Scott Gibbons of Orbitronik, Lilith and Strawberry".^ "Digital Performer Scores the Impossible".^ "Danny Elfman: Building Music for the Movies".^ "Digital Performer for Film Scoring".^ "John Adams on his Violin Concerto".^ Electronic Musician 2004 Editors Choice Awards.Steve Steele - Used on The Expat album.
In January 2012, MOTU announced Digital Performer 8, which also runs on Windows 7.
Chief among its competition on the Macintosh platform are Pro Tools and Apple's Logic. Faster Apple CPUs continue to increase its capacity and performance. Digital Performer remains one of the popular audio workstations on the Macintosh, although MOTU is known to release frequent paid upgrades, considered minor by some users.
The software was updated to version 5.13 on 19 November 2007 to provide compatibility with Mac OS X v10.5. Beginning with version 5.0, MOTU also introduced a set of virtual instruments. The two most important of these are built in pitch correction capability, and a Masterworks EQ plugin that rivals high end 3rd party EQ plugins in terms of quality. After a complete rewrite, MOTU released Digital Performer 4.0 in May 2003, which ran exclusively on Mac OS X.īeginning with version 4.5, MOTU introduced a number of important new features to Digital Performer. Version 3 of Digital Performer was the last to run on Mac OS 9, the Classic Macintosh operating system. By 2000, Digital Performer allowed users to record, mix, and master audio for commercial releases. Foreseeing this, MOTU created its own Motu Audio System (MAS) which helped Digital Performer to tap the Macintosh's native power to record music directly to its own hard drive without the need for external co-processing and dedicated drives. As the Mac's CPU became powerful enough to record the digitized audio directly to hard disk, the DSP cards were gradually rendered unnecessary. Personal computers of this time were too slow to handle high quality recording via their own CPU, so the addition of DSP co-processor cards was necessary to create a functioning audio recording studio.
This enabled users to record their MIDI instruments and mix the results with other live audio recorded in the studio (or vice versa). Digital Performer's specific appeal was its MIDI environment, which was fitted into the same transport system as the audio environment. Digital Performer was originally designed as a front-end to Digidesign's Audiomedia hard disk recording system, which later became Pro Tools. In 1990, MOTU added the ability to synchronise audio ( digital audio) to Performer and released it as " Digital Performer," months after Opcode added this capability to Vision. Native Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) arrives There are many deep features in the MIDI protocol MOTU developed extended capabilities in Digital Performer for handling these controllers and other actions (including remote operation of the software itself) through user-customizable graphical consoles, allowing the operator direct access to deeper features of instruments, stage lighting and various types of machines, all via MIDI interfaces and custom graphic buttons and sliders.
Sending a series of numerical values, such a sequencer could direct many instruments, commanding which notes to play, at what loudness, and for how long to sustain them. In 1985, the company released a music sequencer named Performer, also based on the Macintosh platform, for arranging and performing with synthesizers and other devices which recognized the then-newly developed MIDI standard.
The program used the Macintosh's high-resolution graphics and printing to allow the user to print professional quality music scores. In 1984, Mark of the Unicorn released Professional Composer, one of the first application programs for the Apple Macintosh.