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Ask HN: Getting Started with DAW?

3 点作者 danwee超过 1 年前
So, I saw the other day the release of the ep-133, and it happens that I want to get started doing that kind of stuff (e.g., creating simple beats). I have zero knowledge about DAW&#x2F;sampling and music in general (my background is in soft. engineering), so the first thing that I searched on Google was &quot;open source daw&quot; and I found LMMS (https:&#x2F;&#x2F;lmms.io&#x2F;). Installed it, played a little bit with it and right now I&#x27;m going through the documentation. Feels like a lot to process (I don&#x27;t know almost all of the terminology used).<p>Do you know which kind of books&#x2F;articles&#x2F;blogs I can follow to get started in this world of DAW? I would like to get the fundamentals first and then start experimenting (e.g., not sure if the analogy is correct, but &quot;it&#x27;s like I don&#x27;t want to learn JavaScript, but I want to learn data structures, algorithms and programming in general&quot;).<p>I know there&#x27;s stuff like Ableton, but I would like to first learn the fundamentals (which I hope one can learn with simple open source DAWs like LMMS).

4 条评论

al2o3cr超过 1 年前
The fundamentals in the recording space don&#x27;t have much to do with DAWs at all; they go all the way back to analog recording on tapes etc. That&#x27;s why many DAWs have skeuomorphic details - like the &quot;seven-segment displays&quot; in LMMS&#x27;s interface - to hearken back to physical hardware.<p>I wouldn&#x27;t worry too much about learning things in an application-specific way first and generalizing later. To extend your analogy, you&#x27;re currently at the &quot;how do I computer&quot; level of understanding; knowing theoretically &quot;I need to boost the kick drum at 800Hz by 3dB with a 60Hz bandwidth&quot; isn&#x27;t going to do you any good if you can&#x27;t find the buttons in your specific DAW to make that happen.<p>One thing you&#x27;ll definitely find: different tools are optimized for very different workflows. You _could_ technically record a 2-hour live orchestral performance in Ableton (a tool centered around triggering loops), but you&#x27;ll definitely be ice-skating uphill.
lfciv超过 1 年前
Not exactly in a DAW, but I found Syntorial to be incredibly helpful. Teaches you a lot of jargon around sound manipulation and how to reproduce a desired sound. It&#x27;ll make you way more comfortable navigating a DAW later.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.syntorial.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.syntorial.com&#x2F;</a>
LunarAurora超过 1 年前
&gt; simple open-source DAWs like LMMS<p>If you are willing to explore non-open source options, there are free DAWS that may be &quot;simpler&quot; for you. I say &quot;for you&quot; because it is subjective to a certain degree. I encourage you to try more than one.<p>&gt; Feels like a lot to process &gt; learn the fundamentals<p>Before reading the doc, you may find it less intimidating to watch some YouTube videos. Just don&#x27;t let the huge quantity of available videos (or even of free daws themselves) overwhelm you.<p>If LLMs were available when I first started, I would definitely have them explain the hundreds of little questions I had on this vast subject. a kind of personal tutor.
Pr0ject217超过 1 年前
Other cross-platform alternatives:<p>Bitwig (1 month free trial, I believe)<p>Reaper (can re-&#x27;evaluate&#x27; forever) - better for mixing than producing IMO