Magix Soundpool Hip Hop
I think of the Music Maker program as an audio canvas. It is where you piece together samples to make something. The other programs you mentioned 'Pro-Tools', 'Cakewalk' are called DAWs (Digital Audio Workstations) and are meant for recording, not mixing in the since that the Music Maker works. Sure you can do it, but there are no samples already and you would need experience as a audio engineer to navigate the programs. MAGIX makes its own DAW called Samplitude, which I use and I find is much more robust than any other DAW I have used in the past 11 years.
Drag & drop to arrange the Soundpools or freely combine them. Epic orchestra with powerful string melodies for film music and hip hop. I used magix music maker hip hop edition 6 it was a good program to learn about beats n how to put stuff together it was very compadible to most beat sounds.
Still, I think a DAW is the wrong type of program for you, unless you want to record your own samples from actual instruments. Pro-Tools is weak, in my opinion. New Adventure Games Pc 2011 here.
The cost itself makes it seem like its better than it is, but it really does leave a lot to be desired when working with it, at least that is how Digi-design has always made me feel. Corel Draw X6 Keygen. You really need to research more, and explain what you want to do. You might be more interested in something like Fruityloops, so give that a whirl before you lay out money on something you really don't need.
With the Music Maker program, I can record, making my own samples (just like in a DAW without the headache of settings up tracks and environmental windows) I can then use those recorded samples in a song; regardless of genre. I can manipulate the BMP, Pitch, and Tempo. I can EQ the sound to get a different style out of a 'worn out' sound. At that point, is where the 'creativity' process comes into play. The more creative you are, the more you will find, and I think Music Maker has all the tools necessary to do that job.