Big news for FL Studio fans as developers Image-Line confirm that the DAW will be released as a native Mac application. Image-Line, developers of the hugely popular DAW FL Studio, formerly known as Fruity Loops, have confirmed that the software will be released as a native application for Mac OS X. Mac compatibility has enabled FL Studio to tap in an entirely new base of users, as the Mac is the chosen weapon of choice amongst a growing number of existing and budding producers. FL Studio 20 comes with a license for both PC and Mac and projects are cross-compatible. FL Studio is a complete software music production environment or Digital Audio Workstation (DAW). Representing more than 20 years of innovative development it has everything you need in one package to compose, arrange, record, edit, mix and master professional quality music. Mac users may find that a system update, installer, or package (pkg) can get completely stuck in a verification sequence, with a pop-up alert that says “Verifying ‘name.pkg’” while showing the Gatekeeper icon and a progress bar that never updates. Dealing with latency, clicks and pops are common frustrations when recording in any DAW. There are a couple simple remedies to fix this issue, but the most common is to lower the buffer size.
I'm running FL Studio on a MacBook Pro (2.3 GHz i7, 10 GB RAM) and I use vmware fusion or bootcamp to produce. If I boot into windows alone I get better CPU usage/less underruns and crackling but still when I'm finishing my projects up and have a lot of tracks and plugins on mixer tracks things really freeze up.
I bought a M-Audio M-Track audio interface because I thought it would greatly lower CPU usage but it doesn't seem to make ANY difference. It sounds a little different but CPU usage has not been lowered.
Is there a better way to do this? Is it just not good enough of a audio interface? I always thought that an audio interface would lower my CPU usage as it processes my music through a soundcard in the audio interface rather than using my computers soundcard.
I'm also hoping that the Mac release of FL will help fix these issues but I feel like I should be getting better performance when I'm running straight windows via bootcamp.
Thanks for all the help everyone.
Here's a septet of inspiring techniques with which to ramp up your FL Studio productivity.
For a shedload of tutorials and advice for a range of DAWs, grab the December 2016 edition of Future Music.
1. Playing with time
It's frustrating when you've laid down an arrangement, only to find you could do with adding an extra few bars right in the middle of the song. Well, you can! First, to select a portion of time, hold Ctrl then click and drag on the timeline (at the top of the Playlist). The point from where you click is where the new section will start, and the length of your drag determines the amount of time you'll add. Let go of the mouse button but keep Ctrl held down, then click Insert. Your desired amount of time will be inserted, with the clips shifted to the right. If you want to do the same, but slice and move all clips, repeat the process but hold Ctrl+Alt, rather than just Ctrl.
2. Shortcuts to success
How To Fix Slow Scrolling
As with any DAW, you can save yourself bags of time by memorising FL Studio's most useful keyboard shortcuts. Our favourites are the F keys for navigating around vital project areas: Toggle Playlist (F5), Toggle Step Sequencer (F6), Toggle Piano Roll (F7), Show/Hide Sample Browser (F8) and Show/Hide Mixer (F9).
3. Layers
Fl Studio For Mac Scrolling Slowly
Stacking two or more sounds is an essential production technique and FL Studio 12 makes this process easy. Simply add a Layer track, open its interface, click the Channel Selector of the multiple channels you want to layer to select them, then click 'Set children' in the Layer screen's window. Now play MIDI on the Layer channel, and all of the child layers you selected will play simultaneously.
4. Clone wars
Often, you'll want to edit a clip without affecting the other instances dotted throughout your project. Open your chosen clip's drop-down (via the clip's top-left corner) and select 'Make unique' to clone it. If you're working with an audio clip, any edits will still affect the original audio file - so instead, select 'Make unique as sample' to physically clone the audio file for destructive editing.
5. Playlist navigation
Learning how to quickly navigate around projects will instantly improve your workflow and efficiency. Although scrollbars get the job done, try using your keyboard's 1-5 keys to jump to preset width settings in both the Playlist and Piano Roll. Alternatively, use your mouse's scroll wheel as you hold Ctrl to zoom in and out horizontally; or scroll vertically by holding Alt as you move the wheel. You'll zoom in on wherever the mouse pointer is hovering, so you can easily zoom straight in on a clip by floating your pointer over it as you zoom.
6. Automation station
When you want to automate a synth control, right-click the parameter you want to automate and select 'Create automation clip'. This will automatically create an Automation Clip in the Playlist assigned to that parameter, so you can immediately start drawing in your curves.
7. Riff rescue
Don't you just hate it when you play an amazing riff on your keyboard but forget to record it, and no matter how hard you try to play the same pattern in again, you never quite seem to nail it like that first time? Well, FL Studio 12 is always recorded MIDI in the background and thus can bring your long-lost riff back from the dead. Simply select the channel, then go to Tools>Dump score log to selected pattern and all the MIDI you played will appear. What a lifesaver!