2005 was the last time I played with a #synth or digital production tools. I was an uncommitted teen, but it was a fun diversion from #music theory and #jazz band. It was not a protected interest, and in college I buried it under fear and greed. I want to fix that. With search engines designed for others’ gain, I don’t know what to trust. Assuming I know nothing, can anyone recommend educational resources for musicians that introduce the basics of modern #synthesizer or #DAW technologies?
@tonic @deli_rum really fun outboards too! I have some of the more expensive standalone controllers , and it’s been great really fun. My best advice is get the best thing you want to get directly (because now I have a bunch of outboards like the td3) . You’ll also need a mixer if you’re linking them up. That’s what’s so convenient about going straight to ableton. I would say though pick up a push2 , and learn to play that - it’s incredibly fun 👍🏻 tldr; ableton is really great get a controller
@deli_rum yeah my mistake was I didn’t start with the software , I really like the immediacy of these instruments which made it « all fun , no learning software » , but the big keyboards although they’re amazing and totally worth it do have a learning curve … the best is to learn ableton , but what can make it fun is to have the controller (Push2) to go with it. I have something called the Akai force which I love , but I’m starting to hit the limits of it , and I see that ableton on pc is better
@tonic I dig it. Sounds like a #DAW -first strategy. I can do that. I’ll start playing with Ableton. I’m also looking at #linux -based tools, another opportunity for me to be frustrated with something I don’t know anything about! Purchased a #pinebook pro as a transition/backup to my aging MacBook…. One step at a time! Anyway, thanks again, I’ll be sure to ping you whenever I make some progress and have something fun to share!!
@deli_rum see that's the thing : with a $2000+ computer & ableton + all the add-ons you simply need to operate it ... all this comes out to a pretty huge investment compared to a standalone controller like the rolands, sonicware, akai force, native instruments... i regret it because it turns out knowing how to quickly knock out some audio is really useful for lots of stuff. The bad thing about ableton is that, without a controller, you can't really "turn up and play" . the good news is that there's loads of cheap controllers out there fun ones are MPD218 to learn finger drumming (i use this one plugged into the big controller), small $100+ external keyboards , i also use one of these plugged into my box. And by the way, every time you buy these you get a licence for software that comes with it (eg keyboard software with the keyboard controller) . ableton is a beast of a software, full time it would take months to learn properly , so my best advice is to make sure you have a useable toy on hand just in case you dont wanna butt heads with learning software on your time off ha 👊
@tonic That’s awesome!! Thank you!! I think I’m still three steps behind - need to do some googling on most of what you suggested. I am excited to start playing regularly again, just don’t know what thread to start pulling on to know how these tools work, processes and functions. It’s like being a pen-and-paper cartoonist and wanting create digital animations; the music is still there there, just totally ignorant of the tech and best practices.