FL Studio
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FL Studio, formerly known as FruityLoops, is a digital audio workstation (DAW), developed by Belgian company Image-Line Software. FL Studio was originally the creation of Didier Dambrin, who is now the lead programmer responsible for the overall development.
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About
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FL Studio features a fully automatable workflow centered around a pattern-based music sequencer. The environment includes MIDI support and incorporates a number of features for the editing, mixing, and recording of audio. Completed songs or clips may be exported to Microsoft WAV, MP3, and the OGG Vorbis format. FL Studio saves work in a proprietary *.flp format, inadvertently sharing the same extension as a filetype created by Adobe Flash CS3.
The program is acclaimed for its professional DAW features at an attractive price point. Scoring to video is possible using the video-player plugin, but there is no support for traditional music notation.
FL Studio is written in Borland Delphi and thus there are no finalized plans to develop a native Linux or Mac OS X port. As of September 2008, the Image-Line website indicates that the company supports users running FL Studio on Intel based Apple hardware via Boot Camp.
FL-chan
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Added by BonbondoodleShe has been featured in various Vocaloid videos, Meiko's Various Feelings being one.
She also can be given a voice, but no official voice bank has been made for her.
For the detail of the character and voicebank, visit UTAU wiki.
Usage
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In the western Vocaloid (and also UTAU) scene, FL Studio is among one of the more popular DAWs used by some producers, it is not as widely used in Japan since they also have access to other popular DAW systems as well.[1] It is mainly used to put all the components of the music together. FL Studio also recognizes Vocaloid as a Rewire plugin, and is able to actively feed their voice samples together, making the software overall more attractive to Vocaloid users.
Since the software was designed for a wide variety of uses and aimed to appeal to users of all music levels, many amateur musicians also use this software, and for the western Vocaloid fandom has proven to be popular because it allows even amateurs a chance to remix or make new songs that can compete with professional works. It has many tools that have abled to them to create work on level with more professional Vocaloid users and has been considered one of the more attractive software suites for purchase for this reason by new Vocaloid fans.
Some producers however prefer to prerender the voices from vocaloid into WAV files (which is also a necessary step for UTAU-based voicebanks) and insert it in FL Studio as an audio sample, instead of using ReWire. Alternatively, a whole prerendered voice in a WAV file can be articulated into sliced samples, for easy access to note segments and remixing, as well as for conserving system resources.
Her voice has also been successfully transferred into UTAU. Users need to own FL Studio to legally use her voice. It is not the most realistic of the UTAU voicebanks as its results can from a Vecoder and were made by artificial means.
References
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