Lol I'm using windows, it's just my kids gaming PC, it's airgapped though because I'm sick of Windows 11 nagging. I have my DAW ready to go, just the tutorial bragged about VST support, so I was like cool, I'll go on my Pinephone to download some VST's, hour later I was crying in the show drinking a beer...
So hey 24 hours in and I'm doing MUCH better. I settled in on a windows workflow with Jeskola Buzz, since a 2022 64 bit version was released thats really impressive for freeware. It has pretty good VST2 and VST3 support and I've been find a bunch of good free plugins and finding better plugin sites. I just need a midi keyboard now and maybe some midi from drumkit control. I have this program called Hydrogen Drum Machine that is basically an open source modtracker, sampler. But it's stand alone, which sucks, and the only method of integrating it is with JACK, which is utter shit on windows.
The thing about Hydrogen is I can build very high quality drum loops using any sample I can find and I've already found a shitton from Goldbaby ( https://goldbaby.co.nz )
I would just have to record the loops, pattern and them using them in the other DAW.
Anyway I think I'll just report my progress to you from time to time, pick your brain.
I think the route I'm going is going to give my music more of a retro taste with a lot these free synths have minimoog, 808 and other old school synth vibes, but I think I can levelerage that into something cool. Being a DJ helps too.
Studio One is the best DAW for the price if you can afford the professional suite. It's comparable to protools and is capable of studio production (with the right plugins). It's basically a mixer / rack style daw, but with a full set of features, though it lacks native plugins that are useful.
But if you're doing EDM stuff, you'd probably want ableton. From my personal perspective, it's not as straight forward as studio one, and I wouldn't use it to make a rock album, but it comes with a shit ton of native plugins and samples geared towards edm type stuff. Studio one doesn't come with anything useful.
As far as plugins, I'd look at native instruments for instrument plugins, and waves for mixing plugins. Waves requires an ilok2 usb dongle to use it. Each developer has plugin packs, though they can be pricey.
You need windows for any of it, though I did see someone who made a linux build for audio production that used wine. Just dd it to disk. No need to figure out how to get windows vst to run in wine. You know the drill.
Hey fren, tonight I was racking my brain learning about the audio production software scene and boy o' boy, what a doozy of a scene, they're is so much software, and vst plugins, sfx packs, presents out there, I'm just lost. Any advise bro? Same feeling when I was brand new to Linux and all the lingo and shop talk can be so overwhelming.