Nope. Maschine eliminates the need to "track out". "Tracking out" usually refers to multitrack recording from hardware to DAW while MIDI synced. There's no need for any of that with Maschine. There's no "doing one thing at a time". It's all done almost instantly.Ok(this is coming from memory). You go to export tracks or something like that then select "sounds" for it to track it out. You will have to track out one group at a time this way.
Of course you can still "track out" the old fashioned way with Maschine. I was just correcting false information like "You will have to track out one group at a time this way." It's just way faster and hassle-free to export/drag&drop with Maschine and that's how most people use it.Whatever bro I was still bouncing tracks out, I don't get all caught up in linguistics. And yes you can do drag and drop but I always bounced.
Nope. Maschine eliminates the need to "track out". "Tracking out" usually refers to multitrack recording from hardware to DAW while MIDI synced. There's no need for any of that with Maschine. There's no "doing one thing at a time". It's all done almost instantly.
To the OP: Yes, you can mix and master in Maschine. But people who already have DAWs have more options. When you export from Maschine, it's much faster than tracking out because you don't have to wait to record each song in realtime. You have the option of choosing the loop range or the whole song, and you can choose it to export as stereo master, or each group as separate wave files, or each sound (track) as separate wave files. So you can have each track as separate wave files in the Maschine Recordings folder, ready to be dragged and dropped into a DAW. You can also drag and drop patterns as audio or midi directly from Maschine to DAW without exporting.
@nicro, why did you get rid of maschine fam?
How do you mix and master using Maschine?