15 Good DAWs

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44 comments, last by Zioma 4 years, 9 months ago

I've started with Cubase, but recently switched to Studio One. The workflow is much better in the latter IMO.

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Hi guys.

Some of you have any experience with a DAW running at Linux?

I've been using Linux for many years and currently I'm writing a article about music recording/production using Linux and  your experience will be very useful.

Best regards.

FL Studio is the only music program I know. And since I won the big box version of it I am quite satisfied with it. But what it really comes down to is this:

Try a demo of each DAW. Some daw's do a lot of work for you (which if you want to be a perfectionist then stay away from them.) but in other cases there are DAW's that have a lot of confusing stuff in them that make the work flow hard for you to understand.

Each DAW does things differently but every single one of them require effort and time to understand. There are only so many different ways you can create and manipulate audio files. Some will swear by one program or another but every single program essentially performs the same functions. You just have to find them.

So again the best way to pick a daw is to explore. Download a demo of one for one week, look at the project files and see how some of the sample pieces were stringed together (That is how I got so good at FL Studio was by looking at the sample works and seeing how they did absolutely everything.) If you don't like how it works or it seems too difficult then try another one.

Honest to goodness every DAW performs the exact same functions. You just have to know where to find it. I found this out after buying Propeller Head's Reason 9, Logic Pro 9, Albeton Live a few years back, and even messing around with pro sessions. I began to see that everything in every daw is just in another area and performed differently.

It is like learning another language, but all of the different languages are just pronounced differently. Like tomatoe... toMAHto.

You just have to figure out how to do it in each and every DAW.

Newbie.

My personal favorite for orchestral stuff is Digital Performer, for everything more electronic I use Ableton Live.

On 12/4/2017 at 10:24 PM, The_Con-Sept said:

FL Studio is the only music program I know. And since I won the big box version of it I am quite satisfied with it. But what it really comes down to is this:

Try a demo of each DAW. Some daw's do a lot of work for you (which if you want to be a perfectionist then stay away from them.) but in other cases there are DAW's that have a lot of confusing stuff in them that make the work flow hard for you to understand.

Perfect advice.

Try one and I would go further by saying stick to it. 

Logic Pro X user here and after 3 years, I'm finally making professional quality music.

Working on getting it out there soon.

Try all the DAWs but then stick to one and master it.

On 8/17/2012 at 3:39 PM, nsmadsen said:

I'm not going to get into which is the "best" but this is a good starting list for anyone new to music/audio production and wants to know what options are out there. Most (if not all) of these programs feature some kind of trial or demo mode and I HIGHLY recommend taking a few out for a spin to see which jives with you the best.

http://www.musicradar.com/tuition/tech/the-15-best-daw-software-apps-in-the-world-today-238905/1

And remember: the only thing that really matters in the end is the music. So if you can create the best work fastest on a $50 DAW, then go for it.

Heh I was always wondering where indie devs take game sounds and music from.. solution is to either learn another profession, or to outsource it to someone, but then you not only have to pay but also risk having different sounds/songs made by different people and not feeling like they fit each other.

I have tried many different DAW's in the past years. 

Pro tools, FL studio, Logic, Samplitude, Sonar, ableton live ...

But so far I enjoyed using Cubase the most. Don't really know why, but maybe I just enjoy their workflow. 

Need music? - ziomamusic.com

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