Software vs Hardware
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- KVRer
- 14 posts since 16 Jul, 2014
I recently decided to buy the Korg MultiPoly Synth.
I really wanted the hardware, as I knew it would be more fun playing around with the dedicated hardware interface on the synth/module.
But I didn't really have the room, would have to arse about with cabling etc, and it would cost me nearly £ 800 as opposed to just over £ 100 for the VST. Plus I can stick the VST on my laptop and can noodle around with working it out whilst I travel, which I do a fair deal.
Even if it wasn't sonically identical, the convenience factor alone would be a big pull.
So I bought the VST. Even though I would personally have preferred the hardware, it just seemed the smarter choice.
Anyone implying that people are unprofessional for choosing to go with software, or unprofessional for going with hardware is behaving in an extremely unprofessional manner.
The one thing I can't abide in music is elitism, people who try and use music for their own status.. It' a most unpleasant trait.
Music should be collaborative, people coming together, that's it's true beauty and purpose.
But here....hey, dude, you are using the wrong reverb.....nobody uses that reverb.....
I really wanted the hardware, as I knew it would be more fun playing around with the dedicated hardware interface on the synth/module.
But I didn't really have the room, would have to arse about with cabling etc, and it would cost me nearly £ 800 as opposed to just over £ 100 for the VST. Plus I can stick the VST on my laptop and can noodle around with working it out whilst I travel, which I do a fair deal.
Even if it wasn't sonically identical, the convenience factor alone would be a big pull.
So I bought the VST. Even though I would personally have preferred the hardware, it just seemed the smarter choice.
Anyone implying that people are unprofessional for choosing to go with software, or unprofessional for going with hardware is behaving in an extremely unprofessional manner.
The one thing I can't abide in music is elitism, people who try and use music for their own status.. It' a most unpleasant trait.
Music should be collaborative, people coming together, that's it's true beauty and purpose.
But here....hey, dude, you are using the wrong reverb.....nobody uses that reverb.....
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 281 posts since 4 Apr, 2014
You're using the wrong synth! Even if everyone uses it, it's still wrong!mikeybabes wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 9:38 am I recently decided to buy the Korg MultiPoly Synth.
I really wanted the hardware, as I knew it would be more fun playing around with the dedicated hardware interface on the synth/module.
But I didn't really have the room, would have to arse about with cabling etc, and it would cost me nearly £ 800 as opposed to just over £ 100 for the VST. Plus I can stick the VST on my laptop and can noodle around with working it out whilst I travel, which I do a fair deal.
Even if it wasn't sonically identical, the convenience factor alone would be a big pull.
So I bought the VST. Even though I would personally have preferred the hardware, it just seemed the smarter choice.
Anyone implying that people are unprofessional for choosing to go with software, or unprofessional for going with hardware is behaving in an extremely unprofessional manner.
The one thing I can't abide in music is elitism, people who try and use music for their own status.. It' a most unpleasant trait.
Music should be collaborative, people coming together, that's it's true beauty and purpose.
But here....hey, dude, you are using the wrong reverb.....nobody uses that reverb.....
- KVRAF
- 3037 posts since 5 Jun, 2011 from Preston, England, UK
Great postmikeybabes wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 9:38 am I recently decided to buy the Korg MultiPoly Synth.
I really wanted the hardware, as I knew it would be more fun playing around with the dedicated hardware interface on the synth/module.
But I didn't really have the room, would have to arse about with cabling etc, and it would cost me nearly £ 800 as opposed to just over £ 100 for the VST. Plus I can stick the VST on my laptop and can noodle around with working it out whilst I travel, which I do a fair deal.
Even if it wasn't sonically identical, the convenience factor alone would be a big pull.
So I bought the VST. Even though I would personally have preferred the hardware, it just seemed the smarter choice.
Anyone implying that people are unprofessional for choosing to go with software, or unprofessional for going with hardware is behaving in an extremely unprofessional manner.
The one thing I can't abide in music is elitism, people who try and use music for their own status.. It' a most unpleasant trait.
Music should be collaborative, people coming together, that's it's true beauty and purpose.
But here....hey, dude, you are using the wrong reverb.....nobody uses that reverb.....
software is a tool that allows us to complete a given task.
social media is full of tools that distract us from a given task.
myfeebleeffort
https://paulroach2.bandcamp.com/
https://hearthis.at/83hdtrvm/
social media is full of tools that distract us from a given task.
myfeebleeffort
https://paulroach2.bandcamp.com/
https://hearthis.at/83hdtrvm/
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- KVRian
- 1207 posts since 2 Oct, 2021
Yo Mikey, summed that up for ya.mikeybabes wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 9:38 am
Anyone implying that people are unprofessional for using the wrong reverb.....nobody uses that reverb.....
No seriously, great points you make.
And about that reverb, dude...
ABX is enemy to GAS
- KVRAF
- 26994 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
And that usually means hardwaremikeybabes wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 9:38 am Music should be collaborative, people coming together, that's it's true beauty and purpose.
All the times I've played music with friends, it is always with physical instruments (guitars, bass, synths, vocals, percussion) I love making compositions by myself in my studio, and both software and/or hardware works fine. But when it comes to live playing with other musicians, it is always hardware.
- addled muppet weed
- 111327 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
- KVRAF
- 13975 posts since 19 Jun, 2008 from Seattle
I'm not a musician, but I've designed sounds that others use to make music. http://soundcloud.com/obsidiananvil
- KVRAF
- 11340 posts since 18 Aug, 2007 from NYC
Shabdahbriah wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 9:04 pmIKR?![]()
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I’ve done lots of group music. Now, I don’t want to share.
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- KVRAF
- 2907 posts since 24 Nov, 2023
Yes because you can't play live with software with other musicians or somethingpdxindy wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 2:28 pmAnd that usually means hardwaremikeybabes wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 9:38 am Music should be collaborative, people coming together, that's it's true beauty and purpose.![]()
All the times I've played music with friends, it is always with physical instruments (guitars, bass, synths, vocals, percussion) I love making compositions by myself in my studio, and both software and/or hardware works fine. But when it comes to live playing with other musicians, it is always hardware.
It's like laptops and Mainstage and/or Gig Performer do not exist or are being used everyday on the largest stages in arenas, stadiums, and festival main stages all over the world
I gig multiple times a week with software synths
- KVRAF
- 26994 posts since 3 Feb, 2005 from in the wilds
Sure, there's a tiny percentage... and that's it.IvyBirds wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 10:11 pmYes because you can't play live with software with other musicians or somethingpdxindy wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 2:28 pm And that usually means hardware![]()
All the times I've played music with friends, it is always with physical instruments (guitars, bass, synths, vocals, percussion) I love making compositions by myself in my studio, and both software and/or hardware works fine. But when it comes to live playing with other musicians, it is always hardware.
If I think of all the places I've listened to live music; clubs, bars, cafes, outdoor markets, street buskers, festivals, etc., it has been rare that I've seen live musicians playing a midi controller connected to a laptop.
And even if there is a band where the keyboard player is using a laptop with a midi controller, the rest of the band is playing guitar, bass, drums, and so on.
When it comes to groups of musicians playing live music, hardware reigns supreme.
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- KVRAF
- 8732 posts since 24 May, 2002 from Tutukaka, New Zealand
I'm with vurt. Music is about me (or in his case him), not other people. Hell is other people, no doubt about it. Whenever I've got together with other people to make music it generally ends up in arguments and naturally they're all wrong. It still surprises me that I can sometimes be the only person in the whole world who is right all the time, but it's a funny old world. That's one of the beautiful things about electronic music - it can be done with absolutely nobody else but me, whether hw and/or sw.
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- KVRist
- 179 posts since 23 Mar, 2025
Elitism gets a bad rap. Everyone intuitively understands a need for experts, i.e., elite members of society who can perform a task better than the average person. No one wants an "average Joe" flying their plane. They don't want people "coming together and collaborating" in the cockpit in one Kumbaya moment. Likewise, if someone is about to undergo brain surgery, they wouldn't want their surgeon to say, "Well, I'm no expert. But my opinion is..."mikeybabes wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 9:38 am The one thing I can't abide in music is elitism, people who try and use music for their own status.. It' a most unpleasant trait.
Music requires expertise and elitism, just like any other field. The difference between an actual musical expert and a self-aggrandizing, self-promoter is that the expert knows he is exceptional at what he does and, therefore, has nothing to prove.
- KVRAF
- 18495 posts since 26 Jun, 2006 from San Francisco Bay Area
I don't even understand this. Is there some way to use software without hardware?pdxindy wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 2:28 pmAnd that usually means hardwaremikeybabes wrote: Sun Apr 20, 2025 9:38 am Music should be collaborative, people coming together, that's it's true beauty and purpose.![]()
All the times I've played music with friends, it is always with physical instruments (guitars, bass, synths, vocals, percussion) I love making compositions by myself in my studio, and both software and/or hardware works fine. But when it comes to live playing with other musicians, it is always hardware.
There was a time when I went full ITB and I was still jamming with a handful of friends coming over for sessions. Of course, my controller and computer are hardware, and I'm often using a guitar as well, but my point is that it's kind of odd to suppose that software is somehow some thing that's divorced from hardware. The multi/poly runs on a dedicated hardware platform, as well as Windows and OSX based hardware platforms. If my friends were to come over and I started running multi/poly on my computer, how would they know that what they were hearing wasn't coming from one of my hardware synthesizers? If I had it all routed in Bitwig, and they just saw me arming tracks to change what was playing, they'd have no way of knowing.
It just seems weird to me that these kind of ideas are still hanging on as if they had some validity. I'm not trying to convince you to change your preferences, but to suggest that everyone is better off using dedicated hardware instruments for playing with other musicians is just not true.
Zerocrossing Media
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
4th Law of Robotics: When turning evil, display a red indicator light. ~[ ●_● ]~
- KVRAF
- 3821 posts since 20 Apr, 2005
Well what were they? House or Tree?vurt wrote: Tue Apr 15, 2025 10:29 pm joined a bird watching forum, and it's no different.
was ripped apart as a noob, for not being sure if my sparrows were house or tree?
aggression everywhere.
don't get me started on the knitting forum.
Ignore those people. There are plenty of people who are experts and also enjoy teaching and sharing information and knowledge.
- KVRAF
- 2784 posts since 18 Apr, 2001
Actually.... basically all big live concerts are running largely on a computer with software. Any professional FOH engineer will tell you that a big part of their job is managing a DAW that is running "the show". By the way, Digital Performer is a big thing in that world.
CrimsonWarlock aka TechnoGremlin, Moved to Reason and Rack Extensions exclusively (from Reaper and VSTs) several years ago.
