Motorised faders on the BCF, heapr of knobs on the BCR, 4 layers per preset for the top 8 push buttons, 32 presets, cc and channels free assignable and easy to save and restore. So I hit the Behringer BCF2000 and BCR2000 conrollers (got them cheap on eBay). I'm an experimenting guy, trying to find sometimes strange or exotic solutions.
Harrison, as a mixer manufacturer actually could be the key to getting something like this actually up and running. It seems to me that the problem is that these interfaces become obsolete before their possible usefulness trickles down to the potential end users. I also use a Frontier Design Alphatrack usb device, again I believe obsolete and with no Linux drivers. I always thought that the FW-1884 and Audition could have made a superb, expandable combination. I don't believe that the Tascam is usable in Linux, and it has now been retired by Tascam, so there is little hope. Certainly, I found some anomalies in the code and was given updates by Adobe, but my coding skills were far from up to the task. Recently, I've purchased a few older machines, so now the firewire option has become available again.Īdobe (and previously Syntrillium) did have an sdk which I attempted to use to investigate writing a better interface, but I don't believe this sdk was ever a finished Adobe project. I have never found PC-Card options mechanically robust enough for field work. I used to do some recording out using laptops with this interface, but went through a period of other work during which time the old laptops died and were replaced by more recent units without firewire.
#Control surface for adobe audition full#
This uses Mackie Control emulation, and has not really ever reached its full potential.
My permanent setup here includes a Windows XP machine with a Tascam FW-1884 firewire interface and control surface and running Adobe Audition as the DAW.