The OP obviously already made his purchase, so this may be redundant, but I'd like to offer my views for those who are on the verge of making similar purchase decisions:
CPU power has not been the limiting factor for music production for quite a while now. I talked to Spectrasonics a while back about whether or not my 2013 (1.3GHz) MacBookAir would be able to reliably run Omnisphere live. Their answer:
My personal observations of my '09 MacPro seem to corroborate this. I tend to work pretty efficiently, I hardly ever have more than 20 instances of VI's open, but my 12GB RAM fills up quickly, whereas the CPU hardly ever gets taxed to even 50% (and that is with Box in the background, browser/email open etc.) Loading large sounds from the HDD takes a while, but once loaded everything is fine.
The bottleneck, then, on my system is low-latency performance. At 128 samples, things are just about manageable, at 64 I really can't push the system much before I start having audible artifacts. The audio interface is a critical element in addressing LLP issues. A well-designed PCI driver will yield a much more noticeable improvement in over-all system performance than a faster CPU.
So if reliable LLP is important to you, be sure to do some research and allocate a healthy part of your budget towards the right interface.
CPU power has not been the limiting factor for music production for quite a while now. I talked to Spectrasonics a while back about whether or not my 2013 (1.3GHz) MacBookAir would be able to reliably run Omnisphere live. Their answer:
CPU speed is not as important as RAM. Using Omnisphere live you'd want to make sure you have sufficient memory to load up all your Omnisphere sounds. 4GB is acceptable, but if you're running other plugins in a memory-heavy host, you could have issues.
You have an SSD, so your sounds should load quickly, but make sure you're give Omnisphere as much memory as possible.
My personal observations of my '09 MacPro seem to corroborate this. I tend to work pretty efficiently, I hardly ever have more than 20 instances of VI's open, but my 12GB RAM fills up quickly, whereas the CPU hardly ever gets taxed to even 50% (and that is with Box in the background, browser/email open etc.) Loading large sounds from the HDD takes a while, but once loaded everything is fine.
The bottleneck, then, on my system is low-latency performance. At 128 samples, things are just about manageable, at 64 I really can't push the system much before I start having audible artifacts. The audio interface is a critical element in addressing LLP issues. A well-designed PCI driver will yield a much more noticeable improvement in over-all system performance than a faster CPU.
So if reliable LLP is important to you, be sure to do some research and allocate a healthy part of your budget towards the right interface.