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| quote: | Originally posted by cryophonik
Well, most musicians play an instrument, and instruments are hardware. There's nothing wrong with starting with hardware, and (gasp!) people have made music without computers/software for centuries.
One of the biggest benefits of hardware is that, if you look for decent gear at a decent (secondhand) price, you can usually recoup most/all of your investment if it doesn't work out for you, you decide you want something else, etc. Software is about as good an investment (maybe worse) than buying a new car - it depreciates by a huge amount the moment the dealer hands you the keys. And, having a quality hardware instrument can often inspire people in a way that staring at a computer screen and clicking a mouse won't.
There are no right or wrong ways to start out in music and anyone who tells you that there is is full of s***. So, my advice is to ignore anyone who tells you that you should forget hardware and only start with software, or vice-versa for that matter - think for yourself and just understand that there are pros and cons of either choice. |
Well, he could just pirate everything: DAW and plug-ins.
Or, get a 30 day Ableton Live 8 Suite trial and just reapply for trial codes.
Suite has everything to get started.
Computer Music magazine has a DVD that comes with every issue that has everything to get started plus beginner tutorials. It even has a free DAW.
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| quote: | Originally posted by dj_alfi
change your avatar for fucks sake. |
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