OK that explains a lot. You're not going to necessarily need much in terms of a DAW or any of it if you're mostly putting vocals and lyrics on someone else's arrangements.BONES wrote: Mon Feb 07, 2022 4:32 amFor clarification, I write 90% of our lyrics but I hardly write any music. It doesn't feel like writer's block, though. I don't actually try to write stuff and the way I work makes it extremely unlikely that I would write anything new, in that I hardly ever just play around with instruments because it never feels like the best use of my time.
I'm the opposite, I never write lyrics, or sing in any band I've ever been in, always guitar or keyboards/computer.
You would be surprised. Plus, and this is big, knowing it's entirely possible with your DAW as opposed to looking through a manual trying to decipher that specific DAWs terms, (because unfortunately pretty much half of the terms for parts of a DAW are entirely specific to that DAW), then finding out you'll need to look somewhere else for that feature is far more of a creativity killer than forgetting a key command.Except you're not going to keep all that knowledge in your head if you aren't using it every day.
It sucks when this stuff is buried, I bought the MPC Live thinking I would use it as a workstation before realizing it's ability to program outside of 4/4 in stand alone mode is severely limited. Unfortunately most of the time manuals don't mention what a product can't do.
This is amusing coming from someone who admits their partner does all the songwriting. For the record I'm 90% of the time in DP. At this point the other DAWs are there for collaboration purposes. It's not that hard to work in other DAWs, but most musicians I know are less tech savvy than I am and the least amount of variables the better.Do you guys not have any self-discipline? Do you have to play tricks on yourselves all the time? I could have a dozen different DAWs installed and I can guarantee you I would still spend 100% of my time using Studio One because it's the one in which I am most productive.
MIDI comping can solve a problem with off beat grooves. That's the first and best use I had for it. This is especially useful if you have a sound that overlaps legato style enough to not notice. It wouldn't be very useful for the kind of rigid 4/4 martial beat music you do.