agree 100% on the time to try factor - that's a big reason why I said 'can be a way'.DrGonzo wrote: Thu Aug 03, 2023 4:23 amThere is an element of consumerism to what we do here, but that's not the whole truth. Finding an instrument that really works with you is a damn trying experience and no demos on YT can help you with that process. You really need to sit down and work with something for weeks before you know. Example, I researched the Nord Lead 4 to bits before I bought it. Listened to demos, talked to lots of people. I found one in a store and played it for about an hour. It checked all my boxes. Two months later I found it to be one the most boring an uninspiring instrument I ever owned.neverbefore wrote: Thu Aug 03, 2023 2:05 am buying new gear can be a way of feeling like you are a musician, that you belong in the world of musicians, when it doesn't mean that at all, it is just consumerism. One of the features of consumerism is the replacement of doing and being with buying and owning.
Finding stuff that you love takes time.
One of the most annoying things about not being able to always resell software is that something may turn out less than worthwhile and you get stuck with it. Has happened to me in the last week that something I thought could be resold could not. Now I have something of no use and someone else hasn't got something that may be good for them.
(and youtube demos can be very misleading, particularly with sample libraries)