

Cubase now allows you to create an EXTERNAL INSTRUMENT that will show up in the INSTRUMENT TRACK just like the software ones do with the audio feed on the SAME track just like the INSTRUMENT tracks.THanks and am trying and reading and watching videos so thanks for the tip. You need to read and learn the difference between them. If you can't see that I don't know what to tell you.

INSTRUMENT tracks allow STEREO audio or multi output say from EZ drummer so you have many instruments feeding from that one instrument. Cubase now allows your to record that audio feed down as well. INSTRUMENT tracks were created for software synths and samplers where the midi is recorded and trigger the audio from that instrument on the same track. Cubase now allows you to create an EXTERNAL INSTRUMENT that will show up in the INSTRUMENT TRACK just like the software ones do with the audio feed on the SAME track just like the INSTRUMENT tracks.Ģ. This means that for EVERY MIDI track you have you would have to have an AUDIO track to hear it back, not so with INSTRUMENT TRACKSĢ. IF you wanted that midi as audio you would then have to record that track from your synths audio inputs. You THEN had to create an AUDIO track to listen to that midi track that was triggering the keyboard. With MIDI tracks you would JUST record MIDI on the track using external HARDWARE synths or sound modules back then. MIDI tracks were created LONG BEFORE VST Instruments were around. Why create an "instrument track" if it is just another way of doing something? It should have some advantages or benefits to warrant inclusion into cubase.
