What program should I use if I'm a novice at making music? I've tried Ableton and still have it but it's a bit complicated, anything better? Pic unrelated.
>>65853303
Straight shotacon are the bests
learn ableton properly
>>65853341
I'll try, I'm just wondering if there are any better options.
>>65853437
Well, what do you want to make?
If you are actually trained in an instrument, Audacity should work for throwing guitars and shit together and mixing it. Plus, it's free.
If you're leaning towards more electronic stuff, FL studio is the way to go IMO. Easy to learn, but it's both expensive and once you know what an FL studio instrument sounds like, it sounds super corny.
Ableton is the best all around, though. Worth the time + money investment to learn it.
Fuck Pro Tools.
>>65853502
I used FL Studio before, it's nice but I don't particularly like using it. I want to make experimental music, would Ableton be good for that?
It's very difficult to learn a second DAW after you thoroughly learn one. I use a fucking app on my phone because I go to FL Studio and it just doesn't work how I want it to. It's called Nanostudio. It's alright.
What an image
>>65853524
Yea, abletons probably your best bet. If it's sample-heavy, you MAY be able to get away with Audacity. I don't know; I personally use Ableton but my music endeavors are all just me fucking around with gear lol
>>65853555
Alright thanks. I'll just keep using Ableton then. Thing is I'm on Linux and I have to use a Windows emulation layer (Wine) in order to run it so it's a bit slow. Should I just get a macbook or something?
>>65853581
I wouldn't say bite the bullet and get a whole new CPU. Test the waters with what you got. But, if you do get a macbook, Logic Pro becomes a possibility.
>>65853303
use pxtone. It's dead easy