Forums Music Music Production music production

Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)
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  • #1045415
    funkydan
    Participant

      can any producers on hear tell me whether a laptop is capable of making music on?

      or what is the cheapest and still good computer that can handle the software an hardware?

      raaa

      #1179305
      Acidfairy
      Participant

        This info might help, you can use a laptop but each program has minimum system requirements in order to work no matter if its a laptop or a pc.. here’s some of them for the newest software.

        The minimum system requirements for Ableton Live 7 are as follows:
        Macintosh:
        Any G4 or faster (Intel Mac recommended)
        512 MB RAM (1 GB recommended)
        Mac OS X 10.3.9 (10.4 or later recommended)
        QuickTime 6.5 or higher
        DVD-ROM drive

        PC:
        1.5 GHz CPU or faster
        512 MB RAM (1 GB recommended)
        Windows XP or Windows Vista
        QuickTime 6.5 or higher
        Windows-compatible soundcard (preferably with an ASIO driver)
        DVD-ROM drive

        These are the minimum requirements for running Reason version 4:
        logoWindows60.jpg
        Windows:

        Windows XP SP2 or VistaProcessor: Intel P4 / AMD Athlon XP or betterMemory: 512 MB RAM minimum, 1 GB recommendedScreen resolution: 1024×7682 GB free hard disk spaceDVD reader16-bit windows compatible audio card, preferably with DirectX or ASIO driversRecommended: MIDI keyboard with built-in MIDI interface, or MIDI keyboard and MIDI interface
        logoApple60.jpg
        Mac OS:

        Mac OS X 10.4Processor: G4 1GHz and up or Intel MacMemory: 512 MB RAM minimum, 1 GB recommendedScreen resolution: 1024×7682 GB free hard disk spaceDVD readerRecommended: MIDI keyboard with built-in MIDI interface, or MIDI keyboard and MIDI interface

        FL Studio System Requirements

        Minimum System Requirements

        bullet1.jpg
        Pentium III or Athlon XP (any processor supporting SSE instructions)
        bullet1.jpg
        (or) Intel Mac with Bootcamp (running XP or Vista)
        bullet1.jpg
        Windows 2000/XP/2003/Vista (32 & 64 bit)
        bullet1.jpg
        256MB ram
        bullet1.jpg
        200MB free harddisk space
        bullet1.jpg
        Windows-compatible soundcard with DirectSound drivers. ASIO drivers are required for audio recording (FL installer comes with generic Asio4All drivers)

        #1179304
        General Lighting
        Moderator

          the main thing with laptops is you will need a good external USB sound card. The internal one will be too noisy and probably lack a line in anyway as they are now only intended for business powerpoint presentations and VOIP telephone calls, neither of which need hi fi audio.

          Also, laptops often are stacked full of bloatware as well as windows or OSX, such as “battery monitors” , hard disk monitors, and other things to dumb down the setting up of hardware such as wireless networks. Why these sorts of things are put there as well as Windows control panel etc beats me…

          These take up memory and can cause all sorts of odd issues when doing time-critical stuff like recording long audio streams.

          Sony VAIOs are particularly bad for this (and far from cheap either).

          Some years back now a friend of mine got a ACER with an outboard soundcard which he succesfully uses for a lot of audio production, both electronic and multitrack recording. From what I remember of it it wasn’t that expensive, robust and worked well.

          Another friend uses a Mac – these are nice but expensive.

          I would say you get more for your money with PC’s provided you are willing to learn a bit about computers.

          I’d advise you to also be prepared to spend a fair few weekends sat in learning stuff and just getting the damn thing configured and working straight (sometimes stimulants help :wink:) before you make any decent tunes…

          #1179306
          noname
          Participant

            Yes – a laptop is capable of making music… The only rider is that you need (as GL says) a decent sound card – USB, Firewire (as long as your lappy supports it), or PCMCIA…. Go for something like an M-audio or a Lexicon (cost somewhere around the £100 mark, but well worth it)….

            I’ve been running sound software on my PC for about 15 years now – the hardware you can get today is easily more than capable of running any of the software you might want to run (and even though the minimum requirements lead you to believe you need an ultra modern PC, take them with a pinch of salt – I remember v3 of Reason saying you needed a 1GHz cpu, 256meg of RAM etc etc… I managed to get it running and playing all the demo tracks on a P2-250 with 128 meg of RAM)…

            Go for something like an Acer, or a Fujitsu – they’re nice and cheap, and will do everything you’ll need (try and make sure you get one with Windows XP though – Vista is a spectacular resource hog, and will waste the shiny hardware)…

            The only other things it might be worth investing in are a hard disk upgrade (most laptops have 5400rpm drives – get an upgrade to a 7200rpm one – relatively easy to fit yourself if necessary), and a control surface (trying to make music with a mouse/keyboard usually ends up with you making seriously robotic and dull music. A control surface will give you some artistic hands on feel to your music creation…)

            #1179303
            Anonymous

              Learning music production is not easy to master, for it can take an enormous amount of time on your parts to even learn how to understand producing music just right. However, with the right learning method, you should well be on the way to jamming to some of the top charts in no time at all. Nevertheless, what learning production system would be the right course to realize your dream?

              The answer would naturally be attending a music production course. You can find a lot of online production workshop created by professional music producers who know what they are talking about. Just have a look at a program content that could be enough to kick some serious ass at production. The workshop should cover an entire scoop of different performances and studio production secrets. Therefore, you should be able to learn all the best strategies to succeed as a top Music Producer.

              A program that contains performances of various styles of music, could open your mind to understand how to mix, to take recording, to make beats,loop and more. Learning every style of performance, production and composition could give you a deeper insight into the music world.

              Music producer job is not for the faint hearted. For mastering every aspect of music production you should keep a a steady regiment of practice but at the end of it, you are able to create any style of music production, programming your brain virtually with unlimited pattern combination and allow your creative production juices to flow.

              Nevertheless, the fun of learning music production you should be able to learn to compose and play any piece of music very quickly. Producing music allowing you to imply your creativity journey easily. With some hard work on your parts, you should be able to do more than just learn to produce any music style; you should be able to literally create your own music with your unique signature on it, now that’s something!

              #1179308
              know_hope
              Participant

                @jin 552814 wrote:

                Learning music production is not easy to master

                at least as difficult as checking a date it would seem

                #1179307
                DaftFader
                Participant

                  @know_hope 552922 wrote:

                  at least as difficult as checking a date it would seem

                  Who cares

                  #1179309
                  know_hope
                  Participant

                    @DaftFader 553127 wrote:

                    Who cares

                    well clearly me it would seem, albeit it not very much

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