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Thank you for the link. Just as i thought; the article made it clear that derivative works based on the soundpools cannot be monetized unless additional licence fees are purchased. However only Music Maker & Music Maker Jam are mentioned, which leaves me wondering if the same rule applies to other editions like the Plus, Special and Premium editions. On further checking, EULA in MAGIX store page states this; 5.2 Contents a) In principle, the Contents - with the exception of Live Sets - may only be used for non-commercial purposes. This also applies to music, video or photo data as well as the corresponding templates acquired through or by means of MAGIX Products. So the same rule applies; cannot be monetized without additional fees.

Well that's okay because according to the article linked above: it can be uploaded, just cannot make money off of it. I like MAGIX and their products on Steam. They are easy to use and inexpensive especially when discounted but then i'm not a very critical nor knowledgeable user. I bought Samplitude even though i already have the Music Maker Hip Hop edition mainly because of the Soundloops. Here comes the sticky points: MAGIX commercial use Soundloops are not interchangeable with other DAWs and vice versa even though all DAWs can read wav files. This is due to lack of BPM.inf in other DAWs wav formats.

Mediatek mt8312 proshivka. Download MAGIX Music Maker Premium 2019 27.0.2.28 MAGIX Music Maker is a professional music editing tool that is recommended for music producers and individual artists. With its useful options, they can quickly record songs, mix music with sounds of more instruments, include videos and can export finalized songs as MP3, WAV, AIFF, WMA, AVI.

In addition, MAGIX needs them all in 7 pitches each in order to import the files properly. Additionally MAGIX non-commercial use loops comes in mxcogg (MAGIX's proprietary format) instead of wav which is unusable in other DAWs and also, presumably to prevent exploitation. Third party sources for sound loops are many and generally less expensive plus usable commercially. The differences in format are few but significant. In 3rd party loops or other DAWs format, 1 loop comes in 1 key whereas with MAGIX you get 1 loop in 7 different keys so the counting system is different for a good reason.

MAGIX loops are immediately ready for use in any combination, whereas in other DAWs' format you have to transpose it yourself. In other words 700 loops in other DAWs means you have 700 ingredients in 1 flavour whereas in MAGIX you can have 100 ingredients in 7 flavours. In short, if you're a total beginner like me without any musical knowledge nor performance skills, MAGIX provides a good starting base to dabble in the arts, technology and science of music.