![]() SpectraLayers is built around the concept of layers (the clue’s in the name!) and this is borrowed directly from the world of photo- and image- editing software, where the user copies portions of an image, or imports new image content, to a new layer in order to make modifications that don’t destroy the original underlying material. ![]() SpectraLayers also comes with a standalone app that works independently of your DAW, and so doesn’t require the ARA2 support. This new version will run within any DAW that supports the ARA2 plug-in format, and has been designed to integrate particularly closely with Cubase and Nuendo, where it can replace the standard audio editor for audio parts assigned to the plug-in. The DAW pioneer has now released version 6 for Windows and macOS. Magix went on to release versions 4 and 5 of the software before the tech found yet another new home earlier this year with Steinberg. ![]() The SpectraLayers technology started life with Sony, which published version 1 in 2012, but it passed to Magix when it acquired the bulk of Sony’s media software a couple of years ago. This is precisely what Steinberg’s new SpectraLayers Pro 6 audio editor has been designed to do. The Holy Grail of audio editing, then, would be to work in all three domains simultaneously.
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