Alborada:
Like you I had to wait and save before purchasing most of the the Cube a little more than two weeks ago (!!) - - but I'm not sorry at all. The SE will be useful for lots of things and to many people - - possibly including me when I'm away traveling from my studio - - but it does not appear to be anything like an equivalent to the Cube at a fraction of the cost. The Cube has a depth that, as far as I can tell, no other library appoaches (80GB does not equal 550GB). The relationship here seems to be similar to that between the complete Pro Edition and the Opus 1 and 2 bundle. I wouldn't regret the purchase of the Cube - - it is an instrument that one can continue exploring for years. Given the price of real musical instruments. I don't think it's outrageously expensive. (It's definitely less expensive than Kurzweil K250 - with 12 voice polyphony - - I purchased in 1990.)
Consider the possibility that if you'd waited and bought the SE, you'd have found its limitations fairly quickly and then felt impelled to buy at least parts of the cube. I recently completed a mockup recording of a movement for string quartet for the piece's eventual human performers and each instrument required a matrix of 36 cells. I doubt that this kind of variety would be possible with the SE.
Like you I had to wait and save before purchasing most of the the Cube a little more than two weeks ago (!!) - - but I'm not sorry at all. The SE will be useful for lots of things and to many people - - possibly including me when I'm away traveling from my studio - - but it does not appear to be anything like an equivalent to the Cube at a fraction of the cost. The Cube has a depth that, as far as I can tell, no other library appoaches (80GB does not equal 550GB). The relationship here seems to be similar to that between the complete Pro Edition and the Opus 1 and 2 bundle. I wouldn't regret the purchase of the Cube - - it is an instrument that one can continue exploring for years. Given the price of real musical instruments. I don't think it's outrageously expensive. (It's definitely less expensive than Kurzweil K250 - with 12 voice polyphony - - I purchased in 1990.)
Consider the possibility that if you'd waited and bought the SE, you'd have found its limitations fairly quickly and then felt impelled to buy at least parts of the cube. I recently completed a mockup recording of a movement for string quartet for the piece's eventual human performers and each instrument required a matrix of 36 cells. I doubt that this kind of variety would be possible with the SE.