Well, not necessarily. I open Reaper, choose audio interface (it asks you for that when you start it for the very first time after install), add a track, arm it, choose its input, and press record. Big f'n deal - it's the same in any DAW. Oh and of course (as in any DAW), gotta point it to the folder where your VSTs are, if it isn't one of default folders (which it already uses by default, so on first load it also scanned all your plugins too, if you installed them in the default VST folder). That's total rocket science! :=)
I would say any DAW that has "track types" (like Sonar, Cubase, etc), is actually more complicated than Reaper, which doesn't have track types - this is really a much simpler concept to grasp for newbies. A track is defined by the type of input you select to record on it. Can be audio, can be MIDI. Reaper doesn't care, it just records it. Total rocket science!
Last edited by EvilDragon (27-07-2018 18:02)
Hard work and guts!