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PROPELLERHEAD REASON 7 FORUM SOFTWARE
If you want to get into composing, I hope you're ready for a deep dive that will, if you're serious, take years rather than months, as the rabbit hole goes far beyond just learning a software package - people spend lifetimes studying music theory, sound design, mixing and mastering, and so on. Having jumped from version 7 to 10 recently, I think it's starting to feel very bloated and overdesigned, but its core principle of emulating real-world hardware (specifically in the "rack," which looks just like the real thing, with a few digital enhancements, such as a convenient disregard for the laws of physics) makes it more comfortable to me than other DAWs, which can feel a bit I don't want to discourage you - quite the opposite - but making music is not something you can learn overnight, and DAWs do tend to be quite daunting and complex when you're first starting out. When it comes to composing software, I personally favour Reason, mainly for its interface. I personally compose in Reason, "bounce" (export) audio from that in high quality, then use Audacity to normalise, trim off any unwanted silence from the ends of the file, add metadata, and export in whatever file formats are needed. Click to expand.Audacity is a great audio editing tool, but trying to use it to compose or do more than the simplest of edits to music with it is like trying to hammer a nail with a rolling pin.