I'm hoping to get some feedback/opinions/advice from those who have experience with producing music.

I'm looking to start recording my own music but I don't know which direction to go first as far as what computer (MacBook, PC, other), software (Pro Tools/Logic Pro/Audacity, other), and other recording equipment (audio interfaces, mics, etc).

I appreciate any tips/advice/help.

#asknostr #tunestr

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mac (lower latency no plugin issues ftmp)

your daw is a personal choice. ableton (or bitwig) for arrangement/electronic, reason for synths, and my preference is studio one pro for live tracking

focusrite audio interface

a daw it's highly personal depending on your workflow. studio one pro 6 is like logic meets protools and def mote intuitive that pt. you can buy it outright or take the 30 day demo then get the daw incl all plugins for a $20 monthly subscription

https://www.presonus.com/en-US/studio-one.html

so many typos 🫂

I can't count how many times I make use of the backspace key in a day.

lol. yup. i've got autocorrect/suggestions turned off on my mobile device so that makes for all kinds of fun

Same.

I was watching a video on Ableton and the guy was high on on it for its application for guitarists but he was saying it was lacking in drummer options.

Is it a common thing to switch between different DAWs depending on what you need? Are there software incompatibility issues that would be an issue? Or is it just better to find one that suits all or most of your needs and stick with that?

Also, I have zero experience with a MIDI controller but I want to be able to experiment and add other sounds other than just guitar, bass, & drums. Is the Ableton Push the way to go or are there are comparable MIDIs I should look at?

it is very common to switch daws or chain them together. pick a daw and learn it but don't be bound by it. each daw has it's strengths. 'rewire' by propellerhead allows audio signals and midi events to be passed between two open programs. so, #reason can be rewired into #ableton or abletom can be rewired into studio one pro etc.

so grab that studio one pro demo, grab an ableton demo, and a reason demo and you have quite the studio for midi, virtial instruments, and audio tracking mixing, and mastering

I like reaper (DAW) free & open source

I guess any powerful laptop would do.

That should be enough for electronic music. If its acoustic or live then the room & mics are pretty important

Gear wise I'd stick to Mac just bc most music gear only works with windows or Mac. And for a daw even GarageBand will work perfectly fine depending on your needs.

Considering everyone and their great great grandma from the horse n buggy era suggests a Mac, I guess I'll just be stupid and get a Hewlett-Packard PC with Windows 98 on it. My music will sound like it belongs on an 8 bit Nintendo system, but oh well. 🙃