I was thinking of which software I actually used to make music though the years, so here is a chronological list:- Wavelab (One track, overdub)- Fruity loops- Dance- and HipHop Ejay- Cubase- Logic Pro- Studio One- Ableton Live- Bitwig
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@ranjit nice list! What’s the most used today?
@mosgaard Garage Band, oddly! I like it enough that I might buy its big brother Logic.
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@mosgaard
- My father's Akai DS4000 1/4" to record fake radio shows with my brother as a kid
- a 4 track mixer for video into stereo K7 deck to record my school grunge rock trio as a teenager
- a Fostex D108 digital 8 track DTD + Yamaha 01v mixer (Atari 1024ST + cubase to learn midi + Roland MC500 sequencer)
- Apple Mac G3 + Digital Performer and Motu 2408 audio interface
- Protools 5 / Otari Radar II / Protools 7-10
- Ableton Live for demo composing and recording
- Reaper (on Mac and Linux)@NicolasBaillard love the fake radio shows idea! Reminds me I had this Ghettoblaster I recorded these extremely weird mixtapes on, where I would record 10-20 seconds of a song make small break and the record 10-20 seconds of a new song and so forth. To this day I’m still impressed at how random it all was, I wasn’t going for chorus or a fixed set of bars, I was just going for start/stop, timing would be totally non existent.
Perhaps the first sign of my later love for free jazz?
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@mosgaard That is pretty much the same one I was remembering! Awesome.
@dried I remember making a beat in Fruity Loops and then recording this whole jam with me sticking the mic on to the speaker to create feedback.
It was really reliant when it came to feedback

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@mosgaard Garage Band, oddly! I like it enough that I might buy its big brother Logic.
@ranjit I was a really happy Logic user for years, but totally forgot it until I started working with a local “several million plays” LoFi producer, who knew all the tips and tricks. Really great DAW still.
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@musenhain uh! Atari, you don’t see a lot of that anymore.
Was that for recording or tracker/ish software?
@mosgaard Well, it was the first half of the 90s.

An Atari ST did the sequencing for my hardware synths (mainly a Korg Trinity and some 19"-synths I am not sure of which ones I owned at the time). The Falcon served as 8-track audio recording system: atari.soundpool.de/at_ie.htm (used for voice, guitar, field recording elements, already mixed down sequencer master track).
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@mosgaard Well, it was the first half of the 90s.

An Atari ST did the sequencing for my hardware synths (mainly a Korg Trinity and some 19"-synths I am not sure of which ones I owned at the time). The Falcon served as 8-track audio recording system: atari.soundpool.de/at_ie.htm (used for voice, guitar, field recording elements, already mixed down sequencer master track).
@musenhain ah, of course!
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I was thinking of which software I actually used to make music though the years, so here is a chronological list:
- Wavelab (One track, overdub)
- Fruity loops
- Dance- and HipHop Ejay
- Cubase
- Logic Pro
- Studio One
- Ableton Live
- BitwigWhat’s your journey?
@mosgaard This is fun!
- Reason 1.0
- Digital Performer
- Emagic Logic Gold
- Pro Tools
- Various 24 track and 16 track tape machines from Ampex, Studer, MCI, & OtariI’ve never stopped using Reason or Pro Tools and I don’t bother trying to talk clients out of recording to tape: if they’re serious about it, I’m a solid choice and I’m rarely the cause of sessions taking longer than the artist has budgeted).
-
I was thinking of which software I actually used to make music though the years, so here is a chronological list:
- Wavelab (One track, overdub)
- Fruity loops
- Dance- and HipHop Ejay
- Cubase
- Logic Pro
- Studio One
- Ableton Live
- BitwigWhat’s your journey?
@mosgaard for me it went:
- Audacity
- Logic Pro
- Audition (in an undergrad music tech course, just for a bit)
- Max/MSP
- Pure Data
- REAPERAll of these except for Audition I still use regularly
-
I was thinking of which software I actually used to make music though the years, so here is a chronological list:
- Wavelab (One track, overdub)
- Fruity loops
- Dance- and HipHop Ejay
- Cubase
- Logic Pro
- Studio One
- Ableton Live
- BitwigWhat’s your journey?
@mosgaard
Abandoned, never forget :
- Cubase 2 (Atari ST)
- Pro 24 III (Atari ST)
- Cakewalk
- Samplitude
- Pro Tools
- Digital PerformerStill using, runs fine on Debian / Wine :
- Sequoia
- Emagic Logic Audio 5
- FL Studio
- Studio One -
I was thinking of which software I actually used to make music though the years, so here is a chronological list:
- Wavelab (One track, overdub)
- Fruity loops
- Dance- and HipHop Ejay
- Cubase
- Logic Pro
- Studio One
- Ableton Live
- BitwigWhat’s your journey?
@mosgaard
Cubase
Cubase w/Reason
ProTools w/Reason
just Reason(I still like Reason!)
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@mosgaard
Cubase
Cubase w/Reason
ProTools w/Reason
just Reason(I still like Reason!)
@kingdomkrumb that's great! I tried Reason a couple of times, but never really got into the workflow. But have been using the plugin-version ever since, to get access to mostly the samplers.
What kind of music do you produce with it?
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@mosgaard
Abandoned, never forget :
- Cubase 2 (Atari ST)
- Pro 24 III (Atari ST)
- Cakewalk
- Samplitude
- Pro Tools
- Digital PerformerStill using, runs fine on Debian / Wine :
- Sequoia
- Emagic Logic Audio 5
- FL Studio
- Studio One@tourte great list! Can you work using the apps through Debian / Wine, or does it give you any limitations?
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@mosgaard for me it went:
- Audacity
- Logic Pro
- Audition (in an undergrad music tech course, just for a bit)
- Max/MSP
- Pure Data
- REAPERAll of these except for Audition I still use regularly
@reillypascal what a diverse list! Do you only use Max/MSP stand alone?
I actually still use Audacity to rename meta-data in Wav files sometimes

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@mosgaard This is fun!
- Reason 1.0
- Digital Performer
- Emagic Logic Gold
- Pro Tools
- Various 24 track and 16 track tape machines from Ampex, Studer, MCI, & OtariI’ve never stopped using Reason or Pro Tools and I don’t bother trying to talk clients out of recording to tape: if they’re serious about it, I’m a solid choice and I’m rarely the cause of sessions taking longer than the artist has budgeted).
@fadersolo It have to be joy working a place, where the tape machines are kept running like that.
Is Pro Tools the usual digital recording solution at your place?
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I was thinking of which software I actually used to make music though the years, so here is a chronological list:
- Wavelab (One track, overdub)
- Fruity loops
- Dance- and HipHop Ejay
- Cubase
- Logic Pro
- Studio One
- Ableton Live
- BitwigWhat’s your journey?
@mosgaard
- Band In A Box
- Garageband
- Garageband
- Garageband (I picked it back up a few times
)
- n-Track Studio (test)
- MTP Beats (test)
- Ardour
- Reaper