


The mixer page works in both landscape and portrait-the latter providing a very nice long throw (especially on the iPad Pro 12.9!) for the channel faders. The (landscape) audio editing page showing each track’s waveforms horizontally is easy to zoom in and out for splitting, editing, moving, copy/paste which are all easy to execute. with a small (but professional) range of plugins and samples for additional purchase. Auria has all the features you would expect from a high quality audio app-compressors, reverbs, EQ, delays, chorus, limiting etc. There are two versions but the cheaper LE version can be upgraded to the Pro version (comparison on their website, URL below). Hopefully this overview is useful for other users of 1Chart who are interested in recording. I (still) regard Auria as primarily a top quality recording app (recording was all it did) but with the addition of midi, synths and instruments, it functions fully like other DAWs. I started using Auria with an early version that ran on iPad 1 and over the years have completed several projects since then. Although most of us would have played around with Garageband when we first got our iPads, it is not like any standard computer DAW (ProTools Logic, Studio One, Cubase etc.) many of us would be used to.
