
If someone is dawless, do we call them a daw-cel?
I used to use an Ensoniq EPS16+
Not really. My hardware sequencers were just as easy to work with and a shitload more reliable. By 1986 I had a Korg SQD-1, which was a great sequencer that was easy to use and loaded a song in just a couple of seconds. With the advent of Korg's M1 and it's successors, hardware sequencing got much better than anything you could do ITB at the time.
Maybe that was your experience but it didn't have to be like that at all. My set-up n the 90s was mostly my workstation - M1 -> 01R/W -> Trinity - and a sampler - DSS-1 -> ASR-10. In the early 90s I'd also have had a separate drum machine - DDD-5 -> S3 - but once I got the 01R/W I had enough MIDI channels to do drums without a drum machine.ghettosynth wrote: ↑Fri Mar 24, 2023 2:05 am If your setup in the 90s was evolved at all then you were using racks of stuff, a larger format mixer with the holy grail of the home studio being some kind of 8-bus board. Polyphony came from using multiple synths and you spent hours and many dollars wiring shit up and debugging flakey budget patch-bay bullshit.
Does that matter? My goal was always to have the most minimal set-up I could get away with. I wanted to impress people with my performance, not with my set-up.tapper mike wrote: ↑Fri Mar 24, 2023 8:32 amVST's don't have a physical presence. You don't get to impress yourself or others with your gear.
Yep. my whole set-up today fits in my carry-on luggage. I took all my gear to a gig on the bus once, too. Even my keyboard stand breaks down small enough to fit into a (large) suitcase. Still, when we play locally, I still like to bring a big ger synth or two, just for show.If I were gigging still I'd take my linnstrument and a durable laptop. Easy setup easy teardown.
I'm the opposite. My memories of hardware were all about what a punish everything was. I get far more fun and satisfaction out of software than I ever did from hardware. Plus, of course, the results are orders of magnitude better with software, too.
I f**king hate it when people say "daw", instead of "D. A. W." It would never in a million years have occurred to me to say "daw".
Yes, and yes to that last part too. I have gone on some weird tangents that didn't work out, but I learned things from them.justin3am wrote: ↑Tue Mar 28, 2023 10:31 am I would also say that I sometimes notice this kinda pendulum behavior, where folks decide they want to try a new way of working and they overshoot and end up changing things that didn't need to be changed, then they decide that the new way of working so they swing all the way back in the other direction. This may happen a few times before they find a good balance. Sure with some more consideration, perhaps they wouldn't need to go through all that to find the balance which works for them... but the path to getting there is sometimes fun or frustrating in a way that's informative/useful.
Haha, yes, very nice that you remember this time so enthusiastically.BONES wrote: ↑Mon Mar 27, 2023 4:03 pmNot really. My hardware sequencers were just as easy to work with and a shitload more reliable. By 1986 I had a Korg SQD-1, which was a great sequencer that was easy to use and loaded a song in just a couple of seconds. With the advent of Korg's M1 and it's successors, hardware sequencing got much better than anything you could do ITB at the time.
Anyway, onto the thread title. Who the f**k wouldn't have seen that coming, eh!?! I haven't used a set-up that is as big a punish as that since I got my Yamaha QX-7 sequencer and my first multi-timbral synth (CZ101) in 1985.
Have to agree, the only sampler we could afford was the Mirage, hexadecimal display meant a pen and paper to calculate sample time left etc.... fun.
Cue Caustic3! Not a full DAW, not hardware, still fun...machinesworking wrote: ↑Mon Mar 27, 2023 7:46 am Mostly I think the DAWless craze is about minimalism and a search for authenticity. Authenticity is IMO a useless goal, but minimalism makes sense. If you're confronted with only 3-8 sound generation devices in a fixed setup, you will eventually know them well, it takes some choice away which can be a good thing in the creative process. People get stifled by choice, if all you have is an 808 clone you're not spending any time searching for the perfect kick etc.
In Systems Collapse, my band in the 80's we used a four track tape machine with more studio collages, soundtrack stuff (think Cleanse Fold and Manipulate era Skinny Puppy or early Cabarete Voltaire loops), to allow the keyboard player time to load the Mirage. Needless to say our set was based around those floppies. Certain songs always followed the previous etc.BONES wrote: ↑Wed Mar 29, 2023 11:01 pm Yeah and, with my first sampler (DSS-1), I had to be able to get through a whole gig with just the contents of one-side of a double-sided floppy, because it took way too long to load anything for me to do it on stage. So that was a whopping 600kb of samples I could use for maybe 15 songs. At least the ASR-10 had SCSI. I bought a SyQuest drive for it and it was amazing!
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