This is an article culled from archive material, circa 1997.
MOTU Performer was first off the block as a professional-level sequencing package
for the Macintosh, leaving Opcode behind with the original <
MIDIMAC
sequencer. Opcode's answer, some years later, was
Vision.
In terms of features, Performer and Vision are largely equivalent, and
the rivalry between Mark of the Unicorn
and Opcode
will keep them that way. By the same token, users tend to be locked into
one or other set of products and upgrades, so choice of sequencer is only
part of the equation.
Vision is slightly more semantically
elegant than Performer, since it integrates
the two levels of track data and subsequence into one. Hence,
subsequences can be cut, pasted, shifted and looped (and even
transposed) just like MIDI data. In addition, Vision is more flexible
when it comes to algorithmic/generated sequences and live triggering.
On the other hand, Performer is more pleasing on the eye, and has more
powerful editing and looping facilities.
If I were building a system from scratch and needed a good set of
sequencing facilities, I probably would go for Vision,
OMS
and
Galaxy
together with something like a
Studio 4
interface. Vision is also cleaner semantically and more flexible,
despite some bugs in the subsequence mechanism.
However, Performer still has the edge in some respects
(for example, beat clock and timecode synchronisation via
MIDI Manager
works well; Vision just crashes on me). And I've used Performer
for eight or nine years, so it's second nature to me. And since
I do so much work with
MAX, I don't need a
sequencer with too many smarts, just one with
the right basic functionality.
Vision is available as Studio Vision Pro. I have no particular
intention of upgrading; version 2 offers me
all the features I need, and software bloat leaves a bad taste in
my mouth.