Wavelab 6 Instant
| Feature | | Sony Sound Forge 8 | Adobe Audition 1.5 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Primary Focus | Mastering & CD burning | Stereo editing | Multi-track restoration | | CD Authoring | Red Book / DDP (Excellent) | Basic (Poor) | None (Requires CD Architect) | | Spectral Editing | Yes (Lasso tools) | No | Yes (But slower) | | VST Support | Full VST 2.0 | DirectX only (limited) | VST (Stable) | | Batch Processing | Highly advanced (watched folders) | Basic | Excellent |
WaveLab 6 won the mastering war because of its VST implementation and the —a tool that analyzed a song and suggested EQ and compression settings as a starting point. For a new master engineer, this was like having a mentor in the room. The Legacy: Why We Still Talk About WaveLab 6 If you search forums like Gearspace or Reddit's r/audioengineering, you will find threads titled, "Should I install WaveLab 6 on Windows 11?" (The answer is usually: good luck with the drivers). wavelab 6
Long live the WaveLab 6 master section. Long live the Red Book. Have a memory of using WaveLab 6? Share your stories of CD burning disasters or mastering triumphs in the comments below. | Feature | | Sony Sound Forge 8 | Adobe Audition 1
Whether you have an old CD-R buried in a closet burned with WaveLab 6, or you are a student researching the history of digital audio, remember this version fondly. It was the last great "pure" editor before the DAW wars merged everything into a single, messy timeline. Long live the WaveLab 6 master section