That's a very strange point of view. I have never had fully realised songs in my head. In fact, I think that in my entire life, I have probably only written one or two songs that started off as an idea in my head, and thy would have been very small ideas that required a lot of work to turn into a song. My song ideas all come from playing around with an instrument.EnGee wrote: Mon Jan 12, 2026 8:41 pmTools might be a great motivation/inspiration for creating, but you can compose everything in your mind first or on papers if you can read/write notation fluently.
I dunno, complex synths like DUNE, ANA or Serum can do some amazing things. They definitely have their place, although I mostly prefer to use simpler instruments, which is why I am drawn to emulations of vintage synths.Easy to use tools is very important when composing IMO. I rarely hear good results from complex settings or instruments...
I think he's very much right.
Here's a perfect example - I've never felt the slightest need to hide anything in the arrangement window of any DAW in my life and I honestly don't know how you can possibly work with things hidden. People do it in After Effects projects at work and it does my f**king head in. If your projects are so complex that you feel the need to hide things, my advice is simplify the project instead.if a track was hidden in the Arrangement it was hidden in the Mixer. I don't know about you, but I have almost zero interest in seeing aux tracks in the arrangment window, and zero interest in seeing most MIDI tracks in a mixer.
I do it all the time. My bandmate will send me something with half-a-dozen audio tracks of samples. That's just the way he works, adding layers in a way that (I assume) make sense to him. Most of the time I can combine all of them into a single audio track, although occasionally I have to use two tracks where samples overlap. At some point I also stopped running multi-outs from my drum instruments. Any half-decent drum VSTi will have enough on-board tools to make multi-outs redundant. Battery, in particular, has a gazillion things you can do to a sample and even Ujam's drum instruments have their own mastering effects.
I think you're havin' yourself on. Simplicity allows you to get from one place to another with the fewest steps. That makes it an order of magnitude easier to find and fix issues in a mix. It may not be faster, although I'm betting that it usually will be, but my goal isn't to get things finished in the fastest time, it is to get things done to the highest possible standard.Mostly simple will slow you down, if it's done right complex gives you enough choices to move quickly.