#PRO TOOLS 12 REVIEWS PRO#
Using Eucon Control software is the way forward for Avid, and this allows much better integration and flexibility with Pro Tools than HUI control ever can on other 3rd party controllers. As with other Eucon controllers, there is also a greater ability to customise the S3 for your own requirements with SHIFT, ALT, CONTROL and COMMAND keys towards the bottom left of the controller so nothing has been removed, and there are soft key functions at areas 1-4 which you can program yourself.
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It’s potentially not as immediate as say a C|24 or D-Command where you have (had) a lot of space and everything was laid out, partly because this is a significantly more compact controller and because the S3 is designed for multiple applications. The Avid S3 isn’t really like previous Avid controllers. But admittedly there is the option to select faders and use Eucon Software to then save these as a command and then recall a ‘group record’ and use one button to arm them all…which I think brings me to the basis of what I found about the S3. Nice and space saving on one hand, but then gone are the days of swiping across to arm multiple tracks or select á la ‘Legacy’ controllers, as you can’t do it with a fader in the way. The Record and Select keys for each channel are now neatly fitted between each fader.
#PRO TOOLS 12 REVIEWS SERIES#
I also think it may appeal to anybody who is thinking of getting multiple Artist Series Controllers, as whilst the cost of the S3 is slightly more than say 2 Artist MC Mixes, I do feel the expanded 32 OLED displays and general feel of the S3 are a better option, and if 16 faders are the maximum you need going forward. Just like the S6, however, the S3 is also designed for other EUCON enabled DAWs such as Logic, Cubase and Nuendo. Who is it for ?Īs I mentioned, I feel that the Avid Pro Tools S3 is geared perhaps towards ex Pro Control, Control 24 users or similar, who enjoyed the tactile aspect of fader control, but don’t have the space or inclination to change their total mix room or perhaps cannot justify the S6, now that their Digidesign / Avid previous units are no longer supported or compatible. The Avid Pro Tools S3 is focusing on the studio and recording market and is now positioned somewhere in the middle of their control surface products.Īs there are many online videos and tutorials taking you through the many aspects of the S3, (which I found myself using over the last few weeks) I’m not covering the specifics of each function, this is covered at, but I’m looking at it from a previous controller user and owner (Pro Control, Command|8 and Control 24) and how it could be suitable for somebody like me.
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Towards the end of last year, Avid turned their attention to the VENUE | S3L-X releasing and renaming the control surface section the S3. Now that Avid have released ProTools 12, their future seems to be mapped out with a heavy focus on cloud collaboration, the ability to buy and sell media through the Avid Market place and even the development of an iOS Control App for virtual control which was originally showcased at this year's MusikMesse.īut alongside this virtual world, we also have the Avid Artist Series control surfaces and the larger scalable S6 controllers.