i did a thing where i “sold everything and ran off to india” but in retrospect i was still in possession of a lot of things. i still have a lot of those. but we had the fire scare here and it made me look at everything with a “what would i take” perspective. i realized most of this stuff would stay and burn. better to deal with it now and luckily there are still people buying gear. i sold three valuable-but-flawed, i’ll-get-this-fixed-someday, had-em-for-20-years mics in as many days and it’s like a game now: what can i get out of here.

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Ha, not trying to start a war. Just stating what (again, as far as I can tell) is the objective reality.

“I don’t know how to do something. It must be impossible!” :laughing:

Edit:

To contribute to the topic at hand, I think it’s interesting to think about occasional purges being a part of the process of finding the tools that speak to us best as unique individuals making music. (Or that we speak through best?)

For myself, letting go of Euro entirely earlier this year was occasionally a sad, frankly, choice to make, but in hindsight it’s so clear that it is what I needed. I’ve never been more productive recording and sharing music. I’ve never felt as good about the music I make. For me, to share my music at all requires a clarity that overrides my (often overwhelming in most other areas of my life) insecurity. The purge was part of the process to get here.

And it’s worth noting that, for me at least, I couldn’t have fast-forwarded past Euro and still ended up where I am now. I learned a lot that enabled me and that was essential. It was definitely part insufficiently-checked indulgence… but also part curriculum.

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Depends on your goals. For some things modular is not even interesting until you have a reasonably big system. Steevio is a good example of that. But he uses a largely non-dynamic patch, and focuses his wiggling on much smaller subset of controls. That probably reduces distraction.

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I’ve sold all my gear before, a decade of repairing and collecting vintage equipment. Too much time spent but still not enough to enjoy all these beautiful machines. The thing is, I’m way too attached to them but there are so many reasons not too have them.
The cost is enormous if you add maintenance, cabling, repairs,electricity etc it gets so easily out of hand. To me the in the box solutions have good enough sound if not amazing and a whole lot of advantages.

So here I am again two years later with a fresh and growing collection of vintage gear…
Fortunately I did manage to quit smoking :stuck_out_tongue:

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i’m extremely curious about what you use in cubase that you don’t have in ableton! as someone who tried about 10 daws (including cubase) before finding that ableton was by far the fastest for what i wanted to do

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Live doesn’t have vocal or multitrack comping, pingable hardware inserts, or expression maps built in.

Although there is this https://maxforlive.com/library/device/6209/keyswitch-and-expression-map

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Oh man, so much. MIDI editing capabilities (that’s the biggest one), logical editor presets, quick controls (a total game changer, especially when paired with track presets), the generic remote, macros, VCAs, even some transport functions. And literally every function is key-mappable, even macro commands you make yourself. Or you can control them with MIDI via the generic remote. So you can set up ridiculously fast workflows (though, it does take a lot of time and trial and error).

Plus, for my game audio work, being able to connect to Wwise from inside the Nuendo session cumulatively saves so much time.

I had a “great DAW-off” about ten years ago (had moved from DP to Logic, Logic to Pro Tools) and was never satisfied. Took a long, as-objective-as-possible view to find what had the most capability to work fast, and Cubase won by a mile. I revisit things every so often, most recently digging into Reaper (which is awesome, especially due to its script-ability), but Cubase still wins in terms of fast workflow.

That said, I’m primarily composing to picture (usually orchestral), usually requiring big templates (via Vienna Ensemble Pro on multiple servers), so Live is already out as a serious contender for that. I LOVE Live for what it is, though, especially as an idea-generating or sound design environment. Using Live in ReWire mode with Cubase is one of my favorite things, as the two compliment each other really well. But there are some basic “quality of life” things Live lacks, like a horizontal zoom key command. Sure, you can drag with your mouse, but one of the keys to working fast is using less mouse and more keyboard. It’s small stuff like that, but it adds up, so working in it standalone always feels super slow compared to Cubase.

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I can’t answer @andrewhuang because I am an Ableton fanboy who has never really used any other DAW (and the thought of learning a new one gives me nightmares).

What I can say is that Ableton is amazing at curing GAS because every time I buy something or see a demo for something that looks cool, I realise I can do it in the box.

Case in point… I wanted Morphagene and @andrew suggested how to mimic it in Granulator a few posts up. I was eyeing up a Plonk and an Akaemies Taiko to make a cool little percussion synth but I spent an hour using Wavetable with short envelopes and I got what I wanted. .

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interesting, there are definitely some things that i haven’t needed or come across in live, however a few things you may have just overlooked!

  • the + and - keys for horizontal zoom
  • putting instruments/effects in a rack gives you 8 assignable macros, and you can have unlimited racks including nested racks
  • just about anything can be quickly midi mapped, or a custom key assignment made, using cmd+m and cmd+k respectively

the cubase logical editor presets are amazing though, i think the live equivalent only gives you double/half/reverse/invert.

and to kind of keep this on topic for the thread… i used to hop back and forth between multiple daws or use rewire sometimes, and one of the ways i opted to simplify things was to just make it all work in ableton. for me it works much better, but i understand my friends who go to pro tools for comping takes or logic for arrangement etc.

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Ah thank you man! Yeah, I hope I adequately implied that a good bit of this is likely rooted in ignorance, which you just showed :stuck_out_tongue: Much appreciated regarding the key commands, dunno how I ever missed those.

I LOVE the racks in Live, but the notable difference between the 8 assignable macros and quick controls in Cubase is that the latter always responds to the same CCs. I use a FaderMaster Pro for MIDI CCs, so it’s nice to just flip over to the next preset of 8 CCs and know that they always correspond to the quick controls. It’s a tiny thing, but it’s one less thing to think about.

That said, there are few things as cool as splitting the signal path and processing it differently as you can in a rack…I wish Cubase would implement that feature, it’s so great, especially for sound design.

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I just plopped down $$ to upgrade my ancient Ableton 8 liscence to Ableton 10 suite.

As I’ve been exploring more and more limited set ups I’ve been getting in to live-coding. I feel like between all the software available to me already much of my hardware is feeling redundant.
I ran in to this recently with trying to do a bunch of work with the Volca FM. I love that thing but it’s digital synthesis and there are lots of iterations that have more intuitive interfaces and more direct control of parameters within software. It would be different if I were using a bunch of modular gear but that’s probably going to be something I’m never going to be willing to invest in.
So right now I’m feeling like the future music playground, for me, is in the box. Music is not a career investment for me and I don’t have much of a studio. Even when I was playing live music I was mostly working with a laptop.
If I were to sell my gear I would probably keep things like the Digitakt since it feels like it extends and integrates sampling with Overloop. I would also like to invest eventually in the monome and/or push for that feeling of direct control.
This is just a brain dump of where my head is right now on this topic. I also feel like there are certain pieces of gear that I’ve got that are just too cool to part with. I can’t see myself parting with all my tape gear unless I was forced to financially.
I’m a scatterbrain when it comes to creative stuff. I kind of throw ideas around until something sticks. It’s great and I find interesting territory but I feel like I waste a lot of time.

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Curious: those who sold off record collections - how did you go about doing so? I have a smallish collection (~2k) I’ve considered parting with, perhaps keeping 100 or so of the most meaningful.

The thought of posting them individually to discogs and shipping them fills me indescribable dread.

Selling them as a lot would be clean and lossy (there are few ~$300ish pieces in there), and since it represents phases of collecting, would be challenging - the buyer would need to be into a few rather disjointed genres.

I had considered a table at a flea prior to that being impossible. This seems the most fun way to do it, but instead of keeping the better pieces, I’d be keeping the least interesting to buyers.

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Yeah, selling things isn’t easy. The effort and the inertia to keep hold of things… I can relate.

You’d lose so much of the potential value selling as a lot though… Would be a real shame. Selling one by one would also fill me with dread. How about selling bundles of related records together? Might be a good compromise.

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I sold a large part of my record collection ~4 years ago. I’m friends with a few dealers/collectors so I let them pick through it first, selling at a reasonable price for both parties, and then used discogs for the rest. I mostly loved selling online, because once I bought the mailers (100 whiplash mailers at a time), it was really easy. Tougher now due to pandemic, but dedicating 1 mail day a week is reasonable if you can swing it. It was great having a steady flow of side money coming in for like two years.

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i felt exactly like this for years and years, but i’m starting to sense ableton’s power. the controls are opaque but the scheme for tracks vs stacks of loops, and the way it handles and processes midi is very fun.

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Maybe sell the expensive records that deserve it separately and the rest as a lot.

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Interesting thread. I can relate to the feeling of wanting to simplify things for myself. I completely agree with those who say that it’s all in your mind though. Over a period of decades I have overcome (well, mostly) my desires to downscale, upscale or otherwise change things when they are working perfectly well for me as they are.

Finding contentment is the trick. Then you can have the most complex setup in the world and still feel like it’s simple; because there’s no feeling of having to take it all in at once, or utilise it all to prevent you from feeling guilty, or having an undue attachment to things, etc etc

I believe that this is an important thing to reinforce because it’s the psychology of it that matters. We have all these hangups and quirks which are part of our human nature, but they can be counter productive if we let them govern us too much. Letting go of it all in our mind is more important than selling, or even giving it away - because that’s how you strengthen your mind and gain experience. What you actually end up doing doesn’t matter if your mind is in the right place.

So it doesn’t mean that any other options aren’t viable, it’s just one point that many have put forward before me in this thread, and I think it’s a good point.

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I had my large collections at my parents’ house in Ohio, and they pretty much sat there for a decade while I was at grad school and then here in Houston.

We did two things:

  1. For the CDs, I basically just dropped them off at a local place called The Exchange. They didn’t pay nearly anything, but CDs are practically worthless on the used market anyway.
  2. For the vinyl, my mom found a local eBay shop that happily sold them one-by-one for a commission. There were a few pieces that earned $60+ dollars.

I don’t miss them. I had personal attachments to some, but really I still have strong memories of the discovery process more than the ownership.

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Very true! And I’d rather not have that memory weigh so much next time I decide to move.

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