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Posted (edited)

If you could go back in time to when you first  started what would you tell yourself to do differently .

 

Lets hear your thoughts on this topic .

 

Kenny

Edited by kennywtelejazz
Posted

I would tell myself not to check the Forum every morning for six months looking to see if there is an up... I mean a umm...

Nevermind 

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Posted

Don't do something stupid and break my arm?  That's why I had to stop playing guitar for YEARS and got me onto the computer to make music in the first place...

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Posted (edited)

When the sound and performance of the plugin is stellar , don't worry about the out dated look of the plugin ...case in point Sonitus plugs .

 

Kenny

Edited by kennywtelejazz
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Posted

Hmmm, since computers (and especially DAWs) didn't really exist when most of us started, maybe "Blow off all of this expensive hardware and focus on performance... personal computers will be a thing soon (seriously), and you can get all of this gear for a fraction of the price."

db0c8ef561f24c90a18b10da60d4c645--hercul

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Posted

Numero uno is that I would have warned myself about the audible effect of jitter and staying away from interfaces from before the JetPLL era. And I would have only purchased a single 8-input interface rather than springing for a pair of them that I could chain together. I think there was one single occasion where I used 10 of my 16 inputs, and very few where I used more than 4 (I track drums using a 4-mic setup).

I'd probably warn myself away from mixing plug-ins that combine multiple functions (compression, expansion, EQ, saturation whatever) under the hood with only 2 or 3 controls (Trackspacer is the NOTABLE exception). The tracks in my earliest mixes have too many of those pulling each one in different directions.

Really, though, I don't look back and see big missteps or long detours, only a learning process that continues to this day. It takes time to learn mix engineering, and part of that time is discovering things that don't work. I sought out good advice, both from friends and from what was around on the web. Still do.

I will say, though, that there is some cliche "wisdom" that I was subjected to that I would never throw at a n00b. And more than one "rule" that I consistently break.

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Posted
11 hours ago, satyabrata satapathy said:

wish i knew to play instrument

I had the opposite problem I could play the $hit out of a guitar yet  I had no idea how to use a computer 

 

Kenny

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Posted

There is a lot of gear & software I would never buy again that I spent a lot of money on. Keep it simple. The gear won't make me better.

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Posted

Emulators are interesting but not equivalent to the real thing. 

Try ribbons!

When it stops feeling fun, plug in, stand up, close eyes, play. 

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Posted
1 hour ago, Esteban Villanova said:

The DAW is for recording, not for composing.

I think the opposite way - I use the DAW as a central component in writing & arranging.

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