I disagree. Just being introduced to all these terms and techniques and equipment is overwhelming enough...and you want to make it harder? Use GarageBand if you can, if not, go with Mixcraft, which is often called "the PC version of GarageBand" because it's so intuitive and easy to use. Let them walk before then run or you may turn off a lot of kids who just want to have fun making music, not have "more homework."saint_william wrote: Sun Mar 12, 2023 4:46 am 1. I would like to start them off on a fully functioning DAW like Ableton Lite /Bitwig 8-track, rather than a program designed to make making music as easy as possible, which ends up slowing the potential for growth.
Again, walk before they run. Most of that I wouldn't start out with! Hit the basics first, stuff like:I'd like to introduce midi packs, drawing in midi, soft-synths, hard synths? - microphone placement, keyboards, at first locked to scales, pads, quantization... etc etc as they are ready for each new piece.
- What's a DAW
- What's a plugin and diff types, mostly:
-- VIs
-- Effects
- What's a track
- What's an arpeggiator
- Audio vs MIDI
- Some very basic synth and synth controls intro (what's an osc, what's the "envelope" etc)
If you're focusing on EDM, I wouldn't even get into gear much as they don't really need mics, interfaces, etc. A keyboard and PC is all they really need. But if you're trying to go broader, than that's a diff story...
Some synths aimed right at EDM IMO include Superwave's synths - you really want to check. A lot of stuff perfect for EDM and SUPER cheap: https://www.superwavesynths.com/ GR-8 also (free): https://www.kvraudio.com/product/gr-8-by-phuturetone3. I would like to find the most user-friendly VST's that still allow for decent interaction.
Good luck!