
^ "Presonus Studio One Lets You Create Without Boundaries".
#Sonar x3 bundle files pro
^ "Magix releases Samplitude Pro X5 with ARA2 and MPE support".^ "Magix Release Music Maker Premium & Samplitude Pro X3".^ "Streamlined workflow: Melodyne and Reaper now communicate via ARA 2".^ a b "Celemony announces that Steinberg Cubase and Nuendo have added ARA2 support"."Cakewalk by BandLab adds support for ARA 2 in latest update". ^ "SONAR X3 Makes Control of Sound More Fluid with Deep Celemony Integration, More"."PreSonus Announce Studio One 4 - Chord Track, Pattern Mode, AAF Import And Export, Song Data Import, Impact XT and Sample One XT And More." Pro Tools Expert. "Logic 10.4 Update: the first to utilize ARA-2".

#Sonar x3 bundle files software
Ĭurrent software products which support ARA include the following. To allow software manufacturers to support ARA, a Software Development Kit has been published by Celemony. The first DAWs to support ARA version 2 were Logic Pro X (version 10.4, released in January 2018) and Studio One (version 4, released in May 2018). DAWs which use ARA version 2 are not automatically backwards compatible with plug-ins using version 1. Version 2 of ARA was announced during NAMM in January 2018, introducing new features such as the simultaneous editing of multiple tracks, transfer of chord track information, and undo synchronization with the DAW. It was first published in October 2011 and released as part of PreSonus' Studio One DAW (version 2) and Melodyne (Editor, Assistant and Essential versions 1.3). History ĪRA was developed as a joint effort between Celemony Software and PreSonus, driven by the desire to increase the level of integration between Celemony's Melodyne plug-in and the DAWs using it. This increased amount of information exchange, and availability of data from other points in time, removes the need for audio material to be transferred to & from the plug-in, allowing that plug-in to be used as a more closely integrated part of the DAW's overall interface. ARA increases the amount of communication possible between DAW software and a plug-in, allowing them to exchange important information, such as audio data, tempo, pitch, and rhythm, for an entire song, rather than just at the moment of playback.
