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What Is the Best DAW for Beginners?
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What Is the Best DAW for Beginners?

This entry is part 1 of 24 in the Creative Session: Buyers Guides Session
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If you’re getting started with audio production, it won’t be long before you have to start making decisions. These decisions will potentially cost you lots of time and money. And one of the first of these decisions is about software – which digital audio workstation (DAW) software should you choose?

We asked the question a few months ago in an Open Mic, and the community were generous with their advice. We’ll sum it up here, along with a few thoughts of our own.

But before we get started with your options, let’s talk about a few issues first. Just like the shoes I wear may not fit you, there isn’t one beginners’ DAW that will suit everyone. Here are some questions that will help clarify which app to start with.


Issues That May Affect Your Decision

I have a few kids that are learning to drive. They need to decide whether to learn in a manual or an automatic. Learning in an automatic is great because you don’t have to learn it all at once. While they are concentrating on steering, and traffic, and braking, and indicating, they don’t also have to be worrying about the clutch and gear stick. But they will have to do some retraining down the road if they decide to drive a manual.

“Learning to Drive” by Tejvan Tettinger on Flickr.

You are in a similar position when choosing a DAW. There is a lot to learn. By learning the industry standards like Pro Tools or Logic Pro you’ll save some retraining down the track. But the initial learning curve and expense will be much higher. Would you be better off with an app that is cheaper and less complicated?

Ultimately, that answer is up to you. These questions may help you decide.

  1. What is your ultimate music production goal? If your goal is to work in a studio, it may be better to jump right in with an industry-standard DAW like Pro Tools. On the other hand, if you will creating music at home, finding an app that fits your budget and works on your current computer may be more important.
  2. Do you learn better by taking things step-by-step, or jumping in the deep end? No one stays a beginner forever, and if you learn best by challenging yourself, consider starting with one of the big guns. On the other hand, the initial learning curve will be quite steep. Many people will find learning much easier on a “beginner’s” DAW. In fact, it may have all the features you need.
  3. Are you ready to invest hundreds of dollars in software at this stage of the game? Some of the big DAWs will set you back many hundreds of dollars. And that cost is justified – see it as an essential investment in professional quality software. But the investment also comes with a level of commitment. Once you spend that much money you’ll be reluctant to change programs later. In fact, you may not be able to afford to! Are you ready to make that investment at this stage of the game? Are you sure you’ll stick with music production? Will you be able to make a better-informed decision once you have more experience?
  4. Would you like to do some more research before deciding? Don’t feel pressured to decide right now. Before buying a car you want a chance to kick the tires. The same goes for DAWs. Many have demo versions. Some DAWs come included in other purchases, like a keyboard or audio interface. You might like to try a few before deciding to buy. Also, first spend some time reading about your options. Read users’ opinions in our Open Mic post, read through some tutorials for the DAW you think you might buy, or buy a book or visit the library. Give yourself an opportunity to make an informed decision.

Did that help? From here on we’ll make two sets of recommendations: some DAWs that let you get your feet wet, and some DAWs that let you dive right in. The first set are relatively inexpensive, and easier to pick up. They also have enough features to keep you making music for quite a while – and may be all you need. The second set of recommendations are industry standard apps that are worth the extra effort of jumping right into.

Naturally, these aren’t your only options. If you check the comments at the end of the post I’m sure you’ll find a lot more opinions. Take the time to read and weigh them.


Some DAWs that Let You Get Your Feet Wet

These DAWs are inexpensive and easy to learn, but have enough features to be useful for some time.

GarageBand

Website: www.apple.com/ilife/garageband
$15.00 in the Mac App Store, but comes preinstalled on most Macs.
Runs on Mac OS X

GarageBand is almost the easiest way to get into computer-based audio – as long as you use a Mac! Although it’s designed to be ridiculously easy to use, each version packs in more features. Even if you’re eventually thinking about using Logic Pro, it won’t hurt to start here.

Audiotuts+ readers say:

  • Garageband. Really easy, but one may do lots of great music with it. When you grow out of it, upgrade to something more sophisticated. (jakubt)
  • Garageband (MAC). Acoustica Mixcraft (PC). Garageband is the easiest DAW for hobbyists and absolute beginners. Acoustica Mixcraft looks like an [not so great] imitation of Garageband, but it does the job. (pierre)
  • Beingna high school music teacher, I have tried FLstudio, Sonar, GarageBand and Logic. For a starter I would go GarageBand all the way. You can show/teach all the basics of song creation with multi tracking, looping and MIDI/software. My students love it. (Darrin)

Acoustica Mixcraft

Website: www.acoustica.com/mixcraft
Around $70 on Amazon ($150 for the pro version)
Runs on Windows

This is as close as you can get to GarageBand in the PC world. From their web page: “Mixcraft 5 is a powerful yet easy-to-use multi-track recording studio that enables you to record audio, arrange loops, remix tracks, compose with virtual instruments, score and edit video, and add effects to create stunningly professional compositions. Easy enough for everyone and powerful enough for the pros. Get a studio for a song with Mixcraft 5!”

Audiotuts+ readers say:

  • Garageband (MAC). Acoustica Mixcraft (PC). Garageband is the easiest DAW for hobbyists and absolute beginners. Acoustica Mixcraft looks like an [not so great] imitation of Garageband, but it does the job. (pierre)
  • I teach audio engineering to high school students. I have used FL Studio, Reason, Pro Tools and Mixcraft. I will be using Garageband next year. Many of my students come into my program having used FL Studio. They know it well. I, however, do not care for it much. Mostly the user interface is so small and somewhat confusing. I switched my beginners to Mixcraft now and they really take to it quickly. I like the built-in sounds and effects and recording through the mboxes was very easy. I like that it can edit video as well. Once my students master the basics with that I move them to Pro Tools. As has been stated in earlier posts, it is the industry standard. When I introduced Reason to my students they had a hard time with it. I think it is because they had become so accustomed to other DAWs that they had a hard time with the learning curve. My old lab was PC based, my new lab will be MAC based so I am switching the newbies to Garageband and continuing with Pro Tools and adding Logic for my advanced students. There is a great book called “Making Music with Garageband and Mixcraft” that does a great job of introducing key concepts such as importing, editing, MIDI, recording, etc. and provides great projects to make using those concepts. I highly recommend it. (ABenne66)

REAPER

Website: www.reaper.fm
$60 for personal use, $225 for professional use
Runs on Windows/Mac

REAPER is a powerful yet affordable DAW that is a favorite of many Audiotuts+ readers. From the web site: “REAPER is digital audio workstation software: a complete multitrack audio and MIDI recording, editing, processing, mixing, and mastering environment.”

Audiotuts+ readers say:

  • Reaper by far. Powerful, free to trial, will run off a USB flash drive, you can skin it to look like any DAW, great user support. I honestly think that Reaper will be one of the next big DAW’s. Having said that, my main DAW is Pro Tools. (Brandon)
  • I have to agree with Reaper. I am mainly a Logic user but I have a copy of Reaper at hand at all times and I have no problems switching in between them. It has to be the easiest/cheapest true DAW to use out of the gate. When you get comfortable it also allows you to go beyond the constraints of other “DAW’s” (FL Studio). (JohnnieTech)
  • In my experience a beginner doesn’t stay a beginner for very long, so I’d go for Reaper too. It’s cheap, full featured and easy to learn. I’d tell them to stay clear of Audacity (pure and simple, it is NOT a DAW), and I’d be hesitant to recommend FL Studio because it just isn’t as versatile. (Matt)
  • Reaper is still my number one choice, lots of features and easy to get the hang of. Although I have been using GarageBand more and more on my Mac. (Bas)
  • I looked around at other DAW’s found most of them blah…eh…whatever… Reaper is good though…. Sometimes use that for fun or making music on the road or if i just wanna mess around. (Jeramiah)
  • Reaper! I hold musicproduction courses and I teach my students Reaper because it’s easy, intuitive and powerful! And cheap! (Dubious Quip)

FL Studio

Website: flstudio.com
Less than $90 for the “Fruity Edition) and $219 for the “Producer Edition” on Amazon
Runs on Windows

I have fond memories of my kids making music on Fruity Loops when they were younger. They took to it like a duck to water. This app has quite a different interface and workflow to other DAWs. While it’s not for everyone, many people find it makes more sense to them. It might be worth taking for a test drive.

Audiotuts+ readers say:

  • FL studio for PC and Logic For Mac. FL Studio its like a game… There is no need of any knowledge… Just Drag n Drop. Logic is the most simple and the most powerful DAW…but you must know some stuff… Whatever fits your eye is for beginners. (Dimigo)
  • I started working with Fruity Loops (now FL Studio) back in high school and I’m still a fan. It’s not as flexible as Ableton Live but its workflow is a lot more straightforward and therefore easier for a budding producer. It’s also a hell of a lot cheaper than Live. (drrn)
  • I tried FL Studio. And instantly fell in love with it. It was the most intuitive thing I’d worked with. All of my music was produced in FL Studio and/or Audacity (which doesn’t count here since it’s not a DAW). It would be the only DAW I’d ever recommend to a newbie. Plus, it’s relatively cheap. (mingos)
  • If you’re running FLstudio, it’s just easy enough to stay encouraged, and just complex enough to give you actual cross-platform applicable knowledge. It’s far from one of the best programs out there, but for beginners sometimes less is more. It will teach you enough to know what stuff does, so when you upgrade DAWs, you’ll only have to translate your workstation knowledge, instead of build a whole new vocabulary like you’d have to do with Audacity or Reaper. It weens you in at just the right pace, with the friendly drum looper up front the first time you open the program, that you can learn just by clicking on. The apex of complexity is formula mapping. This is about as complicated as any programs get, when you factor out the utilities built it specifically for each individual DAW. Also it has a mixer reflective enough to get you started on a more professional workstation, but still friendly enough to keep things well demonstrated through your clicking. (Kurt Zimmerman)
  • I started to make music in FL Studio in 2004. it could sounds weird but I went to FL studio from Hip Hop eJay2 that I have know about in 2002. So my first DAW was Mix of eJAy and FL Studio. Through years I was tried to change my DAW – it was Cubase, Sonar, Ableton and even Project5. So I came back to FL Studio anyway 8 years ago. Less than month ago Ive got Mac and say “Good bye” to FL and now I’m on Ableton Live.
    Just my story. (Vyacheslav Breakzhead)

  • DAW for beginnier…. I think FL Studio is best DAW for beginner. (Aaron Pecker)
  • FL Studio will work the fastest and has the most possibilities concerning the price. I also use Cubase, good for deep editing but takes a long time, my mind is not mathematical enough although I can work with it it isnt fast and musical enough. Ableton Live gives me a start but confusing for me to really work things to a finished product. Sonar doesn’t make me happy. Reaper works but maybe also to mathematical for a lot of people. (electricthing)

Some DAWs that Let You Dive Right In

These DAWs are expensive and more difficult to learn, but they are industry standard.

Pro Tools

Website: www.avid.com/US/products/family/Pro-Tools
$520 on Amazon
Runs on Windows/Mac

Pro Tools has been the industry standard in studios for many years. If you’re serious about music production, this should be on your shortlist.

The web site boasts, “Whether you’re in a professional facility, home studio, or on the road, nothing gives you the quality, speed, capability, ease, and inspiration to create like Pro Tools, the most widely used audio creation/production system in the industry”

Audiotuts+ readers say:

  • ProTools is also a good place to start especially now that it doesn’t require M-Audio hardware to run. It’s powerful, relatively simple to learn the basics, has the easiest bus routing of any DAW I’ve worked with, and it’s an industry standard. I only wish it supported VST plugins without using a third-party wrapper. Again it’s more expensive than FL Studio. (drrn)
  • Used Adobe Audition, Soundbooth, and Cubase along the way. Definitely recommend using ProTools. Pick up a used Mbox then work your way to a Digi 002 Unit. You will not regret it. (Tyler)
  • For begginers: To Record? Pro Tools!! To make music? Logic!! To perform live? Ableton Live or Mainstage!! (pedro)
  • I started with Slinky CD Rom, on a Windows PC, one track out of a dozen sounded okay, but they were all fun to write, practise splicing lyric loops and guitar leads, plus getting mind blown by its super psychedelic light show. Moved onto Cakewalk XL 2002, where I got absolutely no where, too confusing and damn difficult, same with Sound Studio II. Then took up Pro Tools M Box Mini 2, with Reason Adapted, the love affair started, the rest of my life went down the drain, the grass grew so high, I kept forgetting to mow the lawn, because I was constantly in either Reason, or Pro Tools or in You Tube looking at instructional videos, reading books, magazines, blog pages, dissecting other peoples’ songs to be able to see actually how they got effects. Moved on to Reason 4, then Pro Tools 8. All up great. Has worked in this old Windows XP for almost two years, with no servicing on the computer, just a diligent campaign of burning off drives, deleting and defragment and disc cleaning, plus keeping the laser part clear with CD Cleaner disks. I still have Frooty Loops 2 which I sometimes use, Cakewalk and Sound Studio, well, getting a bit dusty to say the least. Still can’t figure them out. Got a KeyRig 49 M Audio recently, now all I want to do is ditch Windows XP and get an Apple. (Nick108)
  • I grew up on Cool Edit Pro (later bought by Adobe and rebranded as Adobe Audition), and while I still play with it from time to time, there are probably more comprehensive options available to today’s newbies. Audacity is a nice option for getting one’s feet wet for free, but if you really are interested in learning DAWs, I definitely recommend jumping right into Logic or Pro Tools. (James Marshall Owen)

Logic Studio

Website: www.apple.com/logicstudio
Around $440 on Amazon
Runs on Mac OS X

Logic Studio includes Logic Pro, Mainstage, and other audio apps. It is a favorite among Audiotuts+ authors. From the web site: “Logic Studio is a set of professional applications that lets you write, record, edit, mix, and perform – without getting all technical. It’s also a huge collection of plug-ins and sounds.”

It’s also the “logical” choice if you want to move up from GarageBand. “Ready to do more with your music? Moving from GarageBand to Logic Studio is easy – you can open your projects and start right from where you left off.”

Audiotuts+ readers say:

  • I would tell him or her to go directly for Logic. Its GUI is the simplest to learn, and blimey, is it powerful! Problem is, not everyone owns a Mac. Any software similar to Logic? (bernauZer)
  • FL studio for PC and Logic For Mac. FL Studio its like a game… There is no need of any knowledge… Just Drag n Drop. Logic is the most simple and the most powerful DAW…but you must know some stuff… Whatever fits your eye is for beginners. (Dimigo)
  • The second choice to FLStudio is Logic Pro. But Quite frankly, The way the program looks and feels (in my opinion) doesn’t take the user very seriously with the cheesy instrument picture tabs and soft, grey scheme. Logic Pro feels like a choke-safe toy to me, but even still FLstudio feels more fun. (Kurt Zimmerman)
  • For beginners: To Record? Pro Tools!! To make music? Logic!! To perform live? Ableton Live or Mainstage!! (pedro)
  • I grew up on Cool Edit Pro (later bought by Adobe and rebranded as Adobe Audition), and while I still play with it from time to time, there are probably more comprehensive options available to today’s newbies. Audacity is a nice option for getting one’s feet wet for free, but if you really are interested in learning DAWs, I definitely recommend jumping right into Logic or Pro Tools. (James Marshall Owen)

Ableton Live

Website: http://www.ableton.com/
$499 on Amazon
Runs on Windows/Mac

Designed to suit live musicians, Ableton Live is another great DAW alternative if you value power. “Ableton Live is about making music; for composition, songwriting, recording, production, remixing and live performance. Live’s nonlinear, intuitive flow, alongside powerful real-time editing and flexible performance options, make it a unique studio tool and a favorite with live performers.”

Audiotuts+ readers say:

  • Ableton all the way. Complex, but yet so intuitive in the beginning, plus really inspiring. (Serb)
  • After mastering Garageband, Ableton is the One. Big fan of Ableton myself, I’ve been using it for years. Very intuitive, and the Session View makes it very easy to start jamming in no time. (pierre)
  • It depends on what type of music you want to do. If you want to do a lot of sampling or live performance with samples, then Ableton is my choice. You can pick up a copy free when you purchase things like a keyboard or audio interface (which by the way you should invest in). For the beginner M-Audio has some decent AI’s about $115 that come with a free copy of Pro-Tools) Another excellent DAW, especially if you’re recording live, is Presonus Studio One Artist, which I picked up on sale for $30. (Robert Jensen)
  • For begginers: To Record? Pro Tools!! To make music? Logic!! To perform live? Ableton Live or Mainstage!! (pedro)
  • I started to make music in FL Studio in 2004. it could sounds weird but I went to FL studio from Hip Hop eJay2 that I have know about in 2002. So my first DAW was Mix of eJAy and FL Studio. Through years I was tried to change my DAW – it was Cubase, Sonar, Ableton and even Project5. So I came back to FL Studio anyway 8 years ago. Less than month ago Ive got Mac and say “Good bye” to FL and now I’m on Ableton Live.
    Just my story. (Vyacheslav Breakzhead)

  • Using Ableton Live since version 3? 4? waaay back when it first came out. It’s pretty much perfect for learning audio, as everybody uses it! (Jeramiah)

Conclusion

So, there are a bunch of options to get you started towards a decision of which DAW to purchase. A wise second step would be to download demos of a few of them and try them out.

I didn’t cover every opinion listed on the Open Mic, so if you would value feedback from more people, I encourage you to check it out. And if you’d like to add your own opinion, please leave it in the comments below.

To finish, I’d like to leave you with the thoughts of Audiotuts+ reader Jeremiah. He’s old and wise, and I enjoyed reading his take on the DAWs he has tried. It’s almost a poem. Here it is:


My path through the audio jungle was… (showing my age here)
- Amiga 500 w/ Octamed and 4 track tape recorder!
- Acid 2.0
- Fruity Loops
- Sound Forge

then…
- Acid 5.0,
- Sound Forge 4.0

Started mucking around with Cubase, Nuendo etc. Found it fiddly.
Stuck with Acid right up to the launch of Ableton Live.

then…
Using Ableton Live since version 3? 4? waaay back when it first came out.
It’s pretty much perfect for learning audio, as everybody uses it!
I looked around at other DAW’s found most of them blah…eh…whatever…
Reaper is good though….sometimes use that for fun or making music on the road
or if i just wanna mess around.

But now I use a combo of
Audition 5.5 *great for game audio dev
Ableton 8 for all music
and Pro Tools 9 for all post.

Tried just bout everything else…. become the master of a few tools I reckon
all sticks and stones of different shapes sizes can still make cave paintings in the right hands.
It’s really personal taste…lucky ?…yes we are.

Ableton is good for solo musicians/composers, nerds more experimental/electronic or mangling acoustic stuff, sound designy vibe. Messing with LFO’s automation, but yeah, everybody uses it.

Reaper is good if your keen on doing the bandy thing and using mixers and studio type setups
(poor man’s Pro Tools). Good for your average DIY studio setup. it’s pretty neat as you can play around with it to get it more suited to you, runs on crappy computers and is pretty awesome.

Pro Tools is good if your doing sound design and anything to do with audio for picture and have some decent hardware/computer/plugins. can be like dating a high class model sometimes.

Logic is like Pro Tools and Ableton had a baby.
GarageBand is just Logic’s little brother.

FL Studio is good for electronic music such as techno/trance/electro/breaks etc. strange crazy shit.
Audition 5.5 is good for game audio/file management, etc. batch processing, multi-track sound design and editing and over all audio asset management.

That’s my 2 cents, spend it how you like.

Tags: Basix
  • Hugo

    Good article! Although I don’t think any beginner who ever wants to get further and more professional in music will ever benefit of using Garageband.

  • http://www.beatsandsound.de tobi

    cool article! For completeness, don’t forget most DAWs come in different versions like logic express, ableton live intro, pro tools LE, etc..

  • HansR

    Nice review, but imo you miss 3 big players in your review. Cubase, Reason and Nuendo!

  • http://www.evanrexx.com/blog Evan Rexx

    It really depends on what type of music you are looking to create. If you are just doing audio recording and manipulation Sonar X1 from Calkwalk gives you great quality and powerful tools if you have the willingness to spend some time to learn the interface. Another easy to use program for audio recording is Adobe Audition. If you are looking for a free lightweight and easy to learn DAW check out Audacity.

    Those looking to work with midi and or compose music on a piano roll, then FL Studio is the clear winner for beginners and Pros alike. (Full disclosure: I own and use FL Studio Signature). While FL Studio does have audio wav file recording and manipulation features I would not call them stellar. But the package as a whole is the most diverse and frankly the most fun to work with that I have come across.

    Don’t be fooled by all the Pro Tools fanatics – it is good but there is better and cheaper.

  • http://www.tricky-loops.de Tricky Loops

    Unfortunately you have forgotten to mention MU.LAB and EnergyXT, both are DAW.

    I began my DAW-experience with MU.LAB (several years ago), it’s the easiest DAW available and taylored for beginners. And some things are even for professionals, for example the modular synthesizer MuSynth with very fat sounds. There’s even a free MU.LAB version with not more than 4 tracks, maybe enough for some cheap indie-rock-bands with vocals, guitar, drums and keyboard, but no chance to make dance music with it.

    REAPER (which I use now) is for beginners too complicated and confusing, I think. There’s a good manual with over 400 pages, but for a real beginner it would take too long time to get into. And – more important – there aren’t synthesizer included, so you couldn’t make any sound without additional plugins.

    EnergyXT is like Mixcraft, but I think Mixcraft is easier for beginners, especially the user interface and the workflow. Dunno which one is (from the features) better, I only have tested the demo versions for some days and I found Mixcraft better.

    Pro Tools…do you buy a big Airbus if you wanna learn to fly? At most to boast… :-) But most times it’s better to begin with something more comfortable like MU.LAB.

  • http://www.robntweber.wordpress.com Rob Weber

    Huh? no Sonar? no Cubase? And I believe both have stripped-down versions appropriate for the low-budget beginner.

    Wait, are you only including Mac programs? No, because Cubase covers both platforms.

    Nope, can’t figure it out…

  • http://adriantry.com Adrian Try
    Author

    Thanks for your comments and opinions. Please keep them coming!

    A few words of explanation. It’s probably true that a beginner could start with just about any DAW, but just to list every DAW available wouldn’t be of any help to a beginner. The value in this type of article comes from drawing the line somewhere. This means that some DAWs didn’t make the list.

    Did we draw the line in the perfect place? Probably not! As I said in the article, these recommendations come from opinions offered in an Open Mic filtered through my own thoughts and experiences. DAWs that had strong support in the Open Mic are included here. Some DAWs that were specifically identified as being hard to learn have been purposely omitted.

    Do you think your favourite DAW is better for beginners than the ones listed above? You may be right. There is real value for our readers if you can briefly explain the reasons why you would recommend it to beginners. We may include your comments when we update the article down the track.

    Thanks for listening!

  • Robert Anthony

    Logic Pro all the way. Pro Tools is “Industry Standard” in name only IMO. It’s the one everyone knows by name, but man it takes 20 steps to do anything in it. I say it WAS industry standard, but now it’s just keeping quiet and hoping no one notices that its an old klunky program, and telling anyone who says so to “Shut up”.

  • http://Dynamicinterplay.com Matt

    Actually, for a total noob there was a great simple Daw called Tunafish made by BramBos several years ago. It got you most of the basics like Vst and effects support, sequencing, etc in a simple single interface. I cut my first teeth on Tuareg in the mid -90′s.

    Check it out, you can download all of them for free now.

    http://www.brambos.com/archive.html

  • Verbal

    The best DAW for beginners is MAGIX Music Maker. It introduces best to music theory and digital music production.

    • Mihai

      Indeed, I use it too, and I cannot declare myself more than a beginner. It’s the friendliest. I’ve tried ableton, reason, fruity loops. I was most confortable, as a beginner, with Magix, although, I cannot say I create music a lot, so…

    • Kerry Buell

      I got cubase le 5 with a piece of recording equipment. Could not figure it out. So I bought Magix music maker in a few weeks I had eight songs from magix music maker but it dosent work with my recorder. So i opend cubase again and it made a lot more since.
      Borowed a few free vst so I could back up My hamonica. Used the recorders distortion used its drum sampler.Then used the mackie interfase and I had a controller to make the mastering easier and poped out my first song with a real inserment. I still think cubase is full of bloatware. To many cooks in the kitchen.
      Magix MM is a good kickstarter but it is no engine. I still play with it.
      I am not happy with twenty switchbacks to go 50 feet up the hill that is how i feel about cubase. I am trying a free trial of presonus and I know the thing was made like cubase. So here I am at another forum.
      All my instuments and studio are portable unless I bulk the cpu in the laptop with a mountain.
      Mabe i will try reaper next might be the kickstarter to get me up to big hill cubase or might be the top of the hill if it will interface with my recorder Thank you all for your sugestions.

  • http://soundcloud.com/felisanongrata [vian]

    I think Mulab is very good for introduction to DAW for beginners.
    the GUI is simple and straightforward.
    you can record midi and sound directly to the playlist/sequence.
    you can even edit the midi effortless thru the midi editor [by clicking it twice]
    and its available for windows and mac.

  • Darrin

    I still stand by GarageBand as a beginner DAW for beginners. By all means there are far better out there, but I would not have understood what to do in those programs if it wasn’t getting the BASICS in GarageBand. I also play around in Logic, Reason, Sibelius and Pro Tools.
    My students love GarageBand, and yes I know it’s for mac only, I have had a look and Mixcraft is the way to go if you are PC inclined. As the article says, it is the closest ‘GarageBand’ for PC.
    I wouldn’t be playing around in these other DAWs if it was not for GB. Remember folks this is for BEGINNERS!
    But whatever you understand, enjoy and can afford is really the best way to go. If there is a demo for it, get it before you spend your money and also check out youtube and this wonderful site for getting your head around things you don’t understand!
    Play, record but most of all HAVE FUN!

  • Mr Amsterdam

    Pro tools is still a standard in some studio’s, look at all the big house, and electronic musicians they all work on ableton or Logic Pro, I worked on FL studio first now on Logic pro, the switch was fairly easy

  • airway

    Learn high pass filter, and cut rather then boost on your eq

  • Extreme8588

    No one says much about ACID. Is it any good/any good for beginners? I know that just recently they came out with a new version.

  • Don

    Golly, this comparison doesn’t seem complete. I suppose its understandable given so many good choices to evaluate. There is also no mention of Studio One (now Version 2.0) by PreSonus. It has many highly sophisticated and very user friendly features; and it has a relatively inexpensive beginner package as well.

  • Arjun

    This was really usefull, but for the “pro tools” section, another pretty usefull DAW is Reason.

  • http://thedawstudio.com Ben Harris

    Great list. I have compiled an even more expansive list of DAWs and a bunch information about what a DAW is and which one is best for you based on a handful of scenarios and questions.
    http://thedawstudio.com/Gear/What-Is-A-DAW.html

  • Jazz

    What about cakewalk? I used this software a friend of mine had and it took me 2 days to make a 8 song Hip-Hop demo and thought that was pretty good considering I’ve never used one before. I was just looking to buy one for myself and I was thinking about buying cakewalk but i see there’s a lot of others out there.

  • http://none.com ng

    probabily a striped-down verson of Cubase is still one of the greatest for beginners! you can upgrade later , it has a lot on the effect-side . great on .Plus VST native suport is a great thing!

  • stuck

    have used a few daws, first the most important thing, how good is your computer?
    unless you have quad core blah blah, and 3-4 gb ram dont bother going for the big guns, you will probably install it no problem, but when you start adding a few tracks to your compositions, it will stutter and crash,
    thus useless, second, how easy is it to just jump in and make music, cakewalk, ableton, cubase take a massive learning period, but once you get over that, its easy, but you need a fast pc/mac high end interfaces and all that shizz, my best daw is sony acid, everything is at your fingers, so easy to use and get ideas down, works flawless on any computer, if you are creatively gifted you can use acid like its pro tools, so i would use a cheap computer and acid, you cant go wrong, and save up for a mac with logic or pro tools, and all the interface shizzle that you need, end of discussion, thankyou for your time.

  • http://www.swarsystems.com Swar Systems

    Hi,

    Just wanted to add our brand new DAW, Swar Studio, to the mix. This is specially aimed at music from India, whether Bollywood style or more traditional, as it includes both western and Indian virtual instruments.

    Price is $69. More info at: http://www.swarsystems.com/SwarStudio/

    Musically yours,

    The Swar Systems Team

  • Jean-Sébastien Beaulieu

    I can’t figure out why is Reaper in the “beginner DAWs” category : it is fully-featured as Cubase, Pro Tools and any other “professional DAW”. You would be surprised how much professional work has been done on this always rising in popularity DAW.

    • http://adriantry.com Adrian Try
      Author

      Hi JB. It’s not there because it’s a beginner’s DAW in the sense that it has only enough features for a beginner and no more. It’s there because it’s a good DAW for a beginner to start with. It’s not too expensive, and relatively easy to learn. And it may well be the DAW they stick with long-term.

  • http://howtoprogramdrums.com Neil Paddock

    Thanks for the read. I’m surprised that Propellerhead’s Reason 6.0 didn’t make the list. I think it is the easiest to use of the lot. Similarly Cakewalk’s Sonar X1 is worth a mention, and maybe Magix Samplitude although the trial version is restricted (to 4 tracks) and the cost of the full version exceeded the others mentioned in the article.

    Actualy Sonar X1 LE is currently available for $20 from Cakewalk in their Spring Sale at http://www.cakewalk.com/ until the end of May.

    It’s also worth mentioning that using something like Reaper (which I like a lot) enables you to use some amazing FREE virtual instruments or VSTs, like Synth1, SQ8L and Oatmeal (to name but a few) for which thousands of presets or patches exist (which are also FREE).

    I am currently using Reason 6.0, Reaper and Mixcraft, in that order.

    I agree with the other comments that it is a good idea to try different ones out. There are some out there that I still cannot get on with at all!

    Finally, it is as well for the reader to realise that that may well need other equipment as well as their DAW of choice, such as a midi keyboard, a midi/audio interface and a decent microphone before they can really start to enjoy making music.

  • Glitchiar

    I have tried both FL Studio and Ableton Live. I prefer FL Studio for just one reason: you can play notes using just a normal computer keyboard.

    • Unpolar.Musik

      Your “reason” isn´t one. You have the option to use your “normal keyboard” in Ableton.

  • dixit jaiswal

    i am the user of fl studio 10….i had also used mixcraft 5.2 ..mixcraft is good for beginner and fl studio is most perfect and smart daw for music composing …..its allow you to do any thing what u wants…..even its support vst and vsti …..the default plugins are massive n drum sequencer are very realistic …..most people says it not good because it is cheaper than….other pro Daw but it is father of all DAW ‘s …..
    i know western as well as indian classical….(indian classical is much tough than western as you know.but fl allow u every thing )even tabla the hardest instrument could be played in fl studio ……piano roll in fl studio allow you every thing…to do..)
    You can do every thing in fl studio-
    1)dubstep
    2)hip hop
    3)indian music
    4)rock music like linken park.
    5)costal
    6)remix Dj style(most of pro dj use fl studio for making music)
    ETC…..any thing whats u thinks apply in fl studio……..
    *Use producer edition of fl studio for film scoring or for serial ‘scoring …..it is better than …all .what ever it is logic ,cubase , nuendo ,pro tools…etc
    Be a good musician fl studio allow you do all whats u want.
    thanks

  • dixit jaiswal

    if you wants acoustic guitar …download vsti (REAL GUITAR 2) its feel like original guitar does…

  • DW

    I have several DAWS.They are Mixcraft 6 Pro Studio, Pro Tools 9 M-Powered and Cakewalk X1 Producer. All DAWS essentially do the same thing, they just might do it in a different way. I purchased Sonar X1 Producer right off the bat. Yes, it does have a learning curve and you are going to have to spend some time with it. However, there are a lot of videos on You Tube and on the Cakewalk web site. This program has all the bells and whistles and will do anything you want to do. It has a drag and drop interface and is fairly easy to learn. Get a couple of good books and some good vidz and you will do fine. This program is $400 but if you buy it from ZZSounds they will let you make payments on it. Cakewalk Sonar X1 Producer, you can’t gro wrong with this one!

  • Robbie

    Hi. I’m late to the party, so, sorry about that, perhaps everyone’s gone home!!! Hope not.
    I’ve been using hands on hardware based systems for years…..big console….multitrack unit…….racks of outboard etc etc…..
    I actually started using a DAW yonks ago with Magix Music studio generation MM to cut and paste huge backing vocal arrangements. Basic program, but really nice software for DAW beginners. Limited in ways…however I think this is a plus. I’ve always found that having too many options fries the brain and causes creativity fatigue…..endless fiddling with takes and mixes….end result…….nothing gets finished.

    I’ve been slow to fully embrace the DAW world and abandon the hardware to be honest. But, I’ve set my heart on Mixcraft pro studio 6. From trying the demo and checking the stats I was blown away….and I’ve been involved in the business since the 80s.

    I guess it depends very much on your needs and your clients needs (if youre commercial) Unfortunately, Pro Tools is still “industry standard” so if the need should arise to transfer projects between studios……you won’t be lugging a “2 inch Ampex tape around that’ll work in anything.

    Just my own thoughts.

    Blessings to all.

  • FLSTUDIO BOY

    I LOVE FLSTUDIO ,AND IT WILL BE MY ONLY DAW FOREVER AND EVER ! AMEN

  • Mike Chilvers

    As a real ol’timer still using a 1″tape Tascam MSR 24 Tape Recorder I’d like to know if there are any programs that just
    give you the basics to record Audio with out the Midi bits? I record myself and others using microphones and real instruments but having tried some digital programs like Adobe Audition, Cool Edit etc. I find them all a struggle! I think it’s because being that much older (early 70s!) and knowing little about computers is really the problem but having said that I do think that for beginners and ol’timers the programs could be simpler. At the moment I just have to plug in a Mike or instrument, press record and off it goes (ok, a little more than that but far less complex!) and play it back.
    I know that there is many advantages in using Digital especially since trying to get Analogue gear repaired
    is a problem. In the old days, you plugged a Mike into TR plus a set of Headphones and basically, that was it, record then playback. I know, I’m a grumpy ol’timer but if
    anyone can suggest an ‘easy’ program for me, I’d be obliged.
    Thanks to whoever
    Mike

    • http://adriantry.com Adrian Try
      Author

      Hi Mike

      It’s great you’re expanding your horizons and getting into digital recording. Like you say, audio software can be complicated to begin with – all of those features are meant to make like easier eventually, but there’s a big learning curve to begin with. That’s why we’re here!

      I have three suggestions for you:

      1. The easiest to use audio software is GarageBand, but it’s only available on Mac computers (not Windows). If you have a Mac, it’s the best place to start (and comes free with most Macs). If you don’t, it’s not an option.

      2. If you have a Windows computer, there isn’t really anything as easy to use. Many people say that Acoustica MixCraft is close. I haven’t tried it myself, but it would be worth checking out. There are several versions ranging from $75-150.

      3. Since you are familiar with Tascam products, instead of using a computer program, you could purchase a Tascam digital recorder. They are likely to work in a way you are comfortable with, but save to disk rather than tape. They have both 8-track and 24-track models, ranging in price from a couple of hundred up to about a thousand dollars.

      I hope something I said helps. Please let us know if you have further questions.

      Adrian

  • Logic

    DAW the most controversy topic on the web :D

    If you are beginner and every DAW looks the same to you, so you need to learn one in the first place, there is no difference in any of them, think about it….

    If you have Mac,you are here to make some music, Logic all the way, you can thank me latter, I’m not the only one that stated the same or tried most of the DAW’s there is, worked on few for the years behind, so personally Logic, for one beginner IMO the best choice for mothership, you get +40gb of samples&loops, quality instruments and tools that you will be using later even if there is sea of 3rd party ones (believe me on this) and most important the workflow that is among the fastest ones (have in mind that every DAW have own thing)

    Personally as far the inspiration, workflow and general stability and issues going on , Logic is logical choice, don’t be afraid to jump in that train, you will get far and never be tempted to switch…I’m not a fanboy of whatever, I appreciate my studio time and tool that allows me to do everything faster and efficient, when you notice that your DAW is making your time miserable and doing the same thing in other will take pretty much less time and some things is just not that good like in others, you will ask yourself what are you doing there, why are you torturing yourself with no reason…

    Ask some users or watch the tutorial for the same thing in different DAW’s and you will easily see how thing works, find out what the most of the users of your genre is using and why, but always always consider that everyone is praying something that he have, including me, believe me or not, I’m only doing this for Logic, because no other DAW was knocked the smile of my face that quickly and inspiration is always there :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/otavio.fonseca.90 Otavio Fonseca

    let me show my age too….I was Studio Vision (opcode) master…. loved the sub sequences, the object oriented approach. Now many many years after, I am trying to get acquainted to a new DAW and having a bit of difficulty choosing. FL is great but seems like toy, too much features that it’s hard to learn and make me distracted….i am not sure what i am doing 1/2 the time. I liked Reaper as far as the editor but wasnt crazy about the Virtual instruments….will give Mixcraft a try. tks for the post

  • Try it

    Linux MultiMedia Studio (LMMS) it’s free DAW , (opensource) like Fl Studio, available for Linux and Windows

  • Dean

    I love Propellerhead Reason 6 http://www.speakmymusic.com/daw/

  • http://www.2infamous4you.net/ 2infamouz – Home Studio Guides

    good article

  • http://fororchestra.com/ Walt Ribeiro

    You’re forgetting Digital Performer 8, which is perfect for MIDI, composing, and audio. My choice for years, and much more established and better in almost every way than Pro Tools or Logic. Plus it’s both Win/Mac.