I don't have problems using wineasio, reaper, and windows vsts.urlwolf wrote:Jeff, just to understand what you are aiming for with pydaw... You mention you wanted to get away from reaper et al.
Could you list the points you hate, and how you want to solve them?
I'm asking because now I need to decide if I want to make an investment in reaper (it works well)...
Typically I will select some instruments, perhaps U-he TyrellN6,
Native Instruments Razor, ArtVeras Wusik based Drumatoxin,
with a diversity of sounds, and use a sequencer or arps,
or both, to drive the sounds, and add melodic tracks and ambient fills
as desired, later. And Yoshimi, Hydrogen, Hexter, Whysynth,
can run paralell to Reaper, with Rakarrack, and Calf Plugins as fx
destinations for any L or R output.
One can also look at Reaper for it's impact on the market.
Most every DAW for windows has free or limited versions now.
The hobbyist, and day-job musician can test the full Reaper extensively,
and buy a $60 license that covers a sizeable time span. And they keep
older versions available, so you can go back to a working release,
should a bump in the road occur specific to you. I've had two bumps,
or so I thought, in five years, cost me about twenty minutes...
then later discovered both were based on user laziness/ignorance
(yes the Reaper pdf now has a place in my Solar System
The plugin bundle that reaper provides, is worth the $60,
so you can consider the rest a free factory bonus.
So all the Reaper doom and gloom has a break in the clouds.
Use what works, what you like, what suits achieving your goals,
and keep the tunes coming
I hope all the DAWs get better and better and better