No, I agree totally. No boundaries or limitations results in no real productivity (for me, at least). I’ve sold a wealth of gear and ditched a plethora of plugins for this reason.
Also - and I’m sorry if this is a tangent - I find it helpful sometimes to split the process into different stages:
- the sound gathering stage (like mixing colours before painting);
- the initial production stage;
- the marination period (where i get a track to a point where i let it sit and listen to it before i figure out what it wants to be);
- final structure (acting on the previous stage);
- post production (final mixes and mastering).
Sometimes I follow this rigidly; other times I disregard it completely. On occasions I use it to justify spending hours just making noises (“I was sound-gathering!”)
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