Your First Ever PC & DAW Combo ?

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Depends how far you stretch the definition, I guess.

I had a little transistor radio when I was a kid.
Changing the station made it a bit of an audio workstation. :D

But really, I think if you can't edit audio on it, then it can't be considered a DAW.

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First sequencer was Notator Logic on an Atari. First Daw was Creamwares T-Dat 16 on a Pentium 400 with a 10000 rpm SCSI drive on Windows 98 back in 1999. It was way ahead of it's time and I could record 16 simultaneous tracks from 2 Adats to the computer and then edit them.

Things are lightyears ahead of that now. Used pretty much every Daw since then. Currently using Cakewalk and love it.

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iMac G3 Special Edition (the top at the time). 600MHz, 128MB RAM, 40Gig HD, Mac OS9 (bought in '01).
In early '04 or so, I got Reason 2.5.

That over-priced thing died mysteriously in mid-'05-ish. Never did figure out what happened to it. I'm bitter to this day....but I miss it and I miss Redrum and the Matrix and NN-19 and ALL those wonderful free Refills I had found online. I used to actually come close to finishing songs back then. :)

I've been Windows only since '05 and Reaper only since '12 after dalliances with Tracktion 1, MU.LAB, Podium Free and energyXT.
"The last man on earth doesn't miss anyone at all." - Haujobb, Faith In Chaos

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Atari 400/Basic or Commodore 64/Dr. T''s if you count MIDI. Otherwise, PC and Cubase. Or Windows Sound Recorder if you want to count that. ;-)

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I would count a Midi sequencer synced to a multi track tape recorder... If its about audio editing it was possible back then with scissors and I did it... The early samplers had a way to exchange samples via sysex and could be edited in non real time.
This piece was constructed that way (though strictly not made with a sequencer, but with some homegrown algorithmic Midi magic and a multitrack recorder...)
https://soundcloud.com/ondes-memorielle ... e-of-music
Would be nice to hear some more pieces of those old times...

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zzz00m wrote: Mon Dec 10, 2018 5:20 pm Before PC:

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But the first DAW I ran on a PC was Voyetra Digital Ochestrator Plus. http://www.oldschooldaw.com/forums/inde ... opic=534.0

It had audio recording and editing, alongside MIDI sequencing. PC was Windows 95, Pentium 1 @133MHz, with a Creative Sound Blaster Live for audio and MIDI.
I owned an Alesis MMT-8 as well. I loved using it to transport MIDI tracks between studios. It was a very convenient solution at the time.

I also owned a Brother PDC100 Pro, which I purchase mainly due to the floppy disk drive.

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I sold the MMT-8 in the mid-90's, but the PDC100 I still have available in storage.

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Protracker on a Commodore Amiga 500. This screamer featured an 8 MHz CPU, generous 1 megabyte of RAM and further augmented with a 55 megabyte SCSI hard drive. It's kind of hilarious to think about now considering the capabilities of the phone in my pocket.

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Can't remember the PC but it was some no brand custom built with onboard sound.
First foray into music in that capacity was Virtual Turntables by Carrot Innovations.

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Later I went on to own the original Dance eJay
Then it was Fruity loops demo which I think back then was 20 minute limitation and no save or something similar.
From there I purchased Cubase SL3 as I was able to get educational discount.

I think a bit later I reached the the dizzy heights and got myself a Sound Blaster Audigy with ASIO capability.

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My first was a home-built PII 400mhz (not sure how much RAM, but i seem to recall needing at least 256MB to even play mp3's at the time, so probably 512?), with an adaptec u2w scsi card, and a pair of deskstar 7200rpm scsi drives. I had a soundblaster AWE (the one with the memory slots) + joystick adapter for midi, and an Echo Darla for audio. Cubase vst 3.5 was the software. That would've been around dec of '97, i think.
My first monitors were a pair of the Roland (MA-12c?) powered ones that they used to use for the VS-880 in-store demo stands.

The PC/Cubase really only replaced my vs-880 as a tape machine, though. I didn't actually sequence midi with it till vsti's came along later.
Feed the children! Preferably to starving wild animals.
--
Pooter | Software | Akai MPK-61 | Line 6 Helix | Dynaudio BM5A mk II

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Atari 1040StE and Steinberg Pro-24

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Amiga 500 and Soundtracker. The whole deal with the ST-00 till ST-05 disks filled with songs and samples.
After that Protracker, then an Amiga 600, Amiga 1200, OctaMED.
At that time I also had a PC. With a 386 processor 40Mhz. It had some sort of adlib soundcard with an Yamaha OPL soundchip IIRC. I mostly used it for Designer, though.
After that, 2000...ish, a PC with an AMD Athlon 1000 CPU and Fruity Loops 2.something... fun times. :D
void main(dumb)

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My first setup, if you could call it that, was an early Mac Performa with a copy of SoundFX 0.9.1 (which a voice read out in an effected version when you started it up :) I actually got sound into the thing by hooking up an ancient camcorder to its AV connection and using its microphone to import notes played on a Yamaha PSR-420. My first "proper-ish" DAW was several years later, when I got a cheap academic copy of Arturia Storm Music Studio (sort of like early Reason, but not to the same quality). Eventually I supplanted it with a MIDI notation app called Harmony Assistant and an academic edition of Logic Express, and some form of Logic has been my primary DAW ever since.

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Mid-1980s I was studying music composition privately with Michael Jon Fink in Los Angeles. One day I went to my lesson, Mike had a DX7 hooked up to a little Macintosh computer. I asked "What's that ?", he replied "The future." He hit the space bar on the Mac (I think he was running Performer) and music came out of a small pair of speakers connected to the DX, with no-one playing the keys. A week later I bought a PC-XT (you know, the computer "for the rest of us") with a batch of pirated MIDI software on it. In a short while I decided I liked Voyetra's Sequencer Plus best, so I purchased a legal copy and started learning the details of making music with MIDI gear (first synth was a Yamaha TX81z). Audio recording was out of the question in those early days, but I was into Csound by 1989.

Fast-forward to the end of 2018, I'm still into Csound and I still use Sequencer Plus for any MIDI-intensive composition, though my studio (Linux-based since about the year 2000) now also includes Ardour, Bitwig, u-he plugins, and a host of other amazing music programs. IMO, we're living in a Golden Age for learning, practicing, composing, and performing music, thanks in very large part to our Machines Of Loving Grace and the fabulous software they run for us.

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'DAW' : Atari 1040 ST with Cubase 2

Outboard gear : Yamaha TG55, Roland W30 (sampling workstation), Roland R8 drum machine, a really shitty 12 channel desk with crackly pots, several guitar stomp pedals patched into the desk... One of the most creative periods I ever had!

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Atari with Cubase 3.1, still using Cubase.

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