I hope this is a joke? To be fair: Europeans have formalised music. Church music played a big role here. But regarding invention: not even the guitar is really European.robotmonkey wrote: Wed May 13, 2020 9:30 am The simple reason is that Europeans have invented music and culture in general.
Back to topic: I think there are certain infrastructure and societal requirements to starting a music tech company and for the business being successfull and countries like Germany (especially Berlin, which is today an audio tech hub) met many of those implicit requirements.
It was easy to setup shop in Berlin in the 1990s and it was an attractive city for exactly the kind of person that would venture into audio software: cheap rents, huge electronic music scene, lots of traditional and alternative cultural institutions, free higher education ...
You need a good educational level (especially regardings maths, physics and science in general) to 'produce' people who could venture into that highly sophisticated field, which Germany has (Sweden probably even more so).
Due to the German welfare system one could also venture into unusual fields of work without risking economic survival (in case it doesn't work out, you could still rely on the support of the welfare system - which I doubt would be possible in the US, the UK or any underdeveloped country). Also, there are lots of German state and EU funds that startups can benefit from in their initial phase.
So these factors brought people to Berlin and gave them an incentive to start a music software venture, which worked out quite well for some of them (Ableton, Native Instruments, Bitwig for example).