dv wrote:Luc Henrion wrote:Reaper is certainly one of the cheapest DAWs, but by no means the easiest to master. There are many others, including free ones. On the Mac, of course, there's Garageband, on the PC there's Traktion Waveform free, Cakewalk, etc...
I abandoned the Mac three years ago, so no Garageband.
Traktion Waveform has a nice website with good "Who Are You?" section. There is no "piano player" and all the others mention completely irrelevant (to me) things. But maybe it's worth giving it a try and I will, thanks for mentioning it.
Cakewalk, I explored back in the way, but now I don't remember what the problem was. Its current website is somewhat confusing. Do I want Sonar, Next or Legacy? probably Next.. but then its features are completely irrelevant to me, besides perhaps "Customize your sound". Yet even that it's unclear if it does what I want (e.g. simply adding reverb as a getting started project) and if it does how hard it is. Its FAQ is all incomprehensible jargon.
Etc does not help because I don't know what to look for.
Maybe what you need is something with both a ton of online videos, and a different paradigm. If you’re a software engineer by trade you’ll be able to figure any software out, but a shortcut may be something like Ableton (the “lite” version is given away with SO much stuff that you’ll be able to get a free code from someone).
Watch a few intro videos. See if the workflow makes sense.
The basics (like selecting an audio out) are the same across all software.
I’m an IT guy as well and was easily able to grasp the basics of Ableton or Bitwig.
Tracktion Waveform was weird for me - the way you need to do sends/returns for effects wasn’t intuitive and seemed like it needed more steps than something like Ableton.
REAPER looks complex but just to be able to insert an instrument track and a meter - it’s stupid simple. But to do sends/returns it feels harder than other DAWs.
In fact most DAWs are very simple for that basic thing you’re looking for, even for relatively computer-illiterate people (most pro musicians aren’t IT guys at the same time).
Try the basic versions of Ableton, Bitwig, Cubase, Studio 1. Not the more advanced ones. Go for the absolute basic versions. Try those.
Another recommendation would be to read a book on basic audio engineering. For example, how should you use reverb so you don’t end up with lots of low-end signal “mud”? (AKA “the abbey road trick”).
Or to use a high pass filter at the final stage - something like a gentle roloff around 50Hz for example.
Or basic understanding of compression and limiting.
Or saturation.
These aren’t things for pro (or even wannabe) audio engineers.
These are very simple techniques that can help you get stuff sounding better (=more enjoyable when playing) and become muscle memory very quickly.
I’ve impressed people that claim Pianoteq sounds sterile and artificial just by using these basic techniques - they couldn’t believe it was Pianoteq.
Low hanging fruit!
Last edited by dikrek (02-01-2025 13:49)