Why I sold all my music hardware

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Marius Circus

Marius Circus

6 ай бұрын

After having spent the last 15 years yearning for this or that piece of music gear, and honestly being a bit of a gear junkie, I had a bit of a wakeup over the last year. I decided to stop buying stuff at the end of 2022, sold a bunch of stuff at the start of 2023. This past month I've realized that I both make more and better music "in the box", so I ended selling almost everything of what I had left. I've only kept a few things, that I'm honestly too connected to to let go just yet. But we'll see what the future brings.
So I'm in the same boat as most people now - I'm mainly an "in the box" music maker, and I'm loving it! I thought I'd share my reasoning for going through with this move in this video.
My mission with this channel is to show you that making music in a DAW doesn't have to be hard, as long as you don't over complicate it and and get over the beliefs that you need more gear, skills or time to do what you want. Through this channel, I hope to be able to help you see just that.
Feel free to reach out to me in the comments if you have any questions.
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If you're interested in listening to my music, you can find it here:
Bandcamp: mariuscircus.bandcamp.com/
Spotify: open.spotify.com/playlist/0xf...

Пікірлер: 446
@Avegas77
@Avegas77 5 ай бұрын
Strange...I spent years making music in the box and now I make it all without a computer, only use hardware and my music is amazing now!
@SPAZZOID100
@SPAZZOID100 5 ай бұрын
To each their own of course. For me, I love the visceral experience of using, touching, smelling hardware. I appreciate my synths and drum machines, beyond the fact that they are tools to create music--I see them as works as art in and of themselves. We are living through an amazing hardware renaissance now--re-issues of classics, and modern instruments as well. I never cared for the temporary nature of software. Updating my OS typically leaves a lot of my VST's non-functional. Software is on rent. Hardware is owned indefinitely.
@bepitan
@bepitan 5 ай бұрын
hardware presents a limitation ..limitation breeds creativity ...digital presents a rabbit hole, one which you will never find the end of ..time is finite.
@b.hornetiii.6771
@b.hornetiii.6771 5 ай бұрын
@@bepitan Amen. 👍👍👍
@TripianaVids
@TripianaVids 5 ай бұрын
​@bepitan true that
@daniel_dumile
@daniel_dumile 5 ай бұрын
This is the therapy lesson every home studio guy with a decent passive income needs to hear
@ghfjfghjasdfasdf
@ghfjfghjasdfasdf 6 ай бұрын
I just skimmed over your Spotify playlist: wow, you have an impressive catalogue of work! It’s like an ‘80s retro sound, but with a layer of ‘90s over the top. Very clean, very energetic, tons of melody, lots of interesting leadwork… and I especially enjoy that you explore both Breakbeat and House rythms. Top notch stuff 🤟🔥🤟
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@EchoKraft
@EchoKraft 5 ай бұрын
Wow ! Great video ! I’m freaking out ! Because I can’t stop buying gear. I needed to hear this ! Thank you
@SynthSoundscapes
@SynthSoundscapes 6 ай бұрын
Your points resonate with me a lot. The trade off I've found though is that you lose the problems of hardware, but pick up a bunch of new problems in terms of keeping software up to date and compatible. I've ended up tracking finished projects to multitrack audio because I've had so many issues loading old projects after even a year or so due to software updates making things incompatible.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Yeah, I do the same. Before I finish off a project I aways bounce everything down to audio and simply mute the midi channels. Doesn't take long with the freeze and flatten function. That way, it's possible to come back to a project years later, even if the plugins are gone.
@gradjelamers8770
@gradjelamers8770 5 ай бұрын
Solution for that problem is NOT to update. I have a dedicated audio PC which is not connected to internet. Software keeps working as always.....
@valdir7426
@valdir7426 5 ай бұрын
@@gradjelamers8770 as long as you don't get new software of course
@elvisojeda5600
@elvisojeda5600 6 ай бұрын
Our ego gets attached to things so much that we don't even notice how much of a relief we could feel when just by letting go.
@htechdance
@htechdance 5 ай бұрын
For me it's not ego. It's a passion for unique sound and playing experience a quality synth gives. My home is 500 sq feet and I keep all but one of my 19 (I think) synths and drum machines in a locked closet 24/7.
@truecuckoo
@truecuckoo 6 ай бұрын
Great topic, great video pal 👊🏼
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Much appreciated, coming from you sir! God jul!
@erikjohnson2976
@erikjohnson2976 6 ай бұрын
Great to see you lightening up. I've been going through the exact same downsizing, primarily because I found the hardware were just becoming boat anchors and taking up space, often times not having been used for many years. Additionally, I'm finding the soft synths that I have to be FAR more powerful than the hardware synths. I just sold my last large piece of gear (a Qcon controller) this morning, and it felt so good to not have boxes, unused equipment taking up space in my office. I still have a respectable amount of gear, but each and every piece is actively used. Definitely following in your path.
@djpapakuma
@djpapakuma 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing! At the moment I’m working through myself and figuring out what I want and what I want to let go.
@buuuuuuuuuuuuuu
@buuuuuuuuuuuuuu 5 ай бұрын
So refreshing to see this outlook. I have never felt the need to buy outboard as much as a lot of it tempts me. Everything I make is in the box and I do feel like I'm missing out on anything at all.
@Buffenmeyer
@Buffenmeyer 5 ай бұрын
Another option, if someone wants to stick with hardware but is feeling overwhelmed, would be to downsize to a smaller set up and learn that small set up inside and out. Treat it like a guitar or a violin - master your instrument. Put your energy into the discipline of mastering your instrument and avoid the black hole of “improving” your instrument. 😊
@dualsphere
@dualsphere 5 ай бұрын
I agree. Most people get in buying addiction since everything is widely available, instead of focusing on a small set of gear and being creative to work and overcome its limitations. Buying new hardware to overcome limitations defeats one of the purpose of hardware.
@abletonflow4673
@abletonflow4673 5 ай бұрын
@@dualsphere 100% agree.
@justinsainsbury4050
@justinsainsbury4050 5 ай бұрын
@user-xr3cu8wl5t
@user-xr3cu8wl5t 5 ай бұрын
thanks for this video ! i needed to hear this!
@alancarmody8848
@alancarmody8848 6 ай бұрын
The problem with a lot of KZbin music producer content is that it tries to extrapolate universal truths from personal experience: what works well for you mightn’t work for someone else. But I get where you’re coming from! Cheers
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
I totally agree. And I'm not saying this will be the best solution for everyone. It's just what works for me. Each of us has to figure out what works best for us. To each his own and all that. 😊
@ShelbyWatson
@ShelbyWatson 6 ай бұрын
This is how I felt for most of my career in music, then a few years ago, I bought an Novation Peak primarily as a controller for Omnisphere since it has the hardware integration. Funny enough, I stopped using Omnisphere because I really enjoyed using the Peak to create my sounds. I’m just now hitting a point where I’m feeling less inspired by the process of working with outboard gear because the workflow can be tedious. After watching this video, I think I’m going to swing back the other way and do most of my writing in the box, though I do still plan on using my Peak to control Omnisphere when I’m in my studio because it controls the parameters so well. Thanks for sharing!
@saber5401
@saber5401 6 ай бұрын
Totally the best decision, after 20 years of the gear addiction i went completely minimal, softsynths, ableton and push 1. Now i actually make music instead of deciding what to use... in the end unless you are making music for musicians most people really don't care how you made it and only care about good music.
@pavelmolchanov7156
@pavelmolchanov7156 5 ай бұрын
Vst music sucks
@GuyGamer1
@GuyGamer1 5 ай бұрын
Where's your released music?
@HotStrange
@HotStrange 5 ай бұрын
@@pavelmolchanov7156so most music? Lol ignorant comment
@pavelmolchanov7156
@pavelmolchanov7156 5 ай бұрын
@@GuyGamer1 your music made on vsts suck
@ThienNguyen-ie5qz
@ThienNguyen-ie5qz 5 ай бұрын
​@@pavelmolchanov7156show us your music
@JamesMyddelton
@JamesMyddelton 6 ай бұрын
Great video, love the honest feedback - really useful. I was about to start accumulating more hardware but I've decided to stick with mostly with plugins for now, although I need to stop accumulating those also !
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's easy to just find something else to spend on if you're not a bit conscious about it. Glad you liked it btw!
@GordonBBB123
@GordonBBB123 6 ай бұрын
Nice move. I've been thinking about doing the same thing, recently. I love gear, it's fun to play with, it looks nice in the studio... but I always just make music in Ableton.
@MorbidManoeuvres
@MorbidManoeuvres 5 ай бұрын
this is really cool you can do it this way, i automatically feel better using hardware ive tried many times to vibe with in the box but it never cut it for me. I now only use it for effects plugins which i realised is a huge plus when it comes to the closeness of hardwear effects units (and i have also been thru alot to understand for myself what i actually prefer) plus the money saving is huge. Actually this makes me view it as half way where you are since i do swear by in the box effects :)
@ItsWesSmithYo
@ItsWesSmithYo 5 ай бұрын
Space and travel got me going down the “in the box” path, with ableton and M4L, and now I’m going further than imagined by making everything from scratch…and the new apple silicon chips are so crazy I have unprecedented flexibility on a laptop…so being able to work whenever/wherever I’m inspired…same setup…kind of game over 😂
@minimal3734
@minimal3734 5 ай бұрын
I did the same. But selling everything was not the right solution for me. Hardware isn't the problem. Having too much of it is the problem. Selling everything was an over reaction to the burden of having too much stuff. Now I have reaquired essential gear which I love and limit myself to a minimal setup.
@acefstripe
@acefstripe 6 ай бұрын
Looking forward to your progress Marius.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Thanks buddy!
@ryanhursh6322
@ryanhursh6322 5 ай бұрын
I recently made the same change and got a Push 3 for the hands on aspect. It’s had its ups and downs… many pros for sure but the thing that’s really getting me down is the fan noise on my computer. I guess it’s too old at this point but it was never an issue when I worked out of the box. Also, I guess many of us just love gear. The buttons and lights and knowing how it all works. But yeah, many pains in the ass that come with it. I don’t regret the change but I do miss my gear at times. Definitely miss my Octatrack.
@CRLCRRLLTV
@CRLCRRLLTV 5 ай бұрын
Allot of gear out there but finding the tools you enjoy and feel good using is always important inside the box or physically end result how your art makes you feel is really what matters ❤ cheers to you ✊🏽
@Jimantronic
@Jimantronic 6 ай бұрын
yeah, agreed. I've been through the same thought process this year. I hadn't appreciated how much mental overhead there was with acquiring, integrating, maintaining and properly learning every piece of gear as well as making it all work well together. I'm getting far better results from learning a much smaller set of kit and it being centred around a macbook. People say they don't want to be stuck behind a computer, but for me, it was the opposite. Previously I was stuck only able to make music in 1 specific room. Now with the macbook it's totally portable and like you say, it fits in around family life and has very low friction to being creative 👍
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Sounds like we're in the same boat! 😊
@bryanbytes
@bryanbytes 6 ай бұрын
90% agree… the learning process does force one to rethink the creative process, which introduces a lot of creativity in itself
@soniccanvas9973
@soniccanvas9973 6 ай бұрын
Nice one Marius, keep the videos coming!
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Thanks! I will for sure!
@LabRatWarfare
@LabRatWarfare 6 ай бұрын
Your video just popped up on my feed and with that title... I decided to give it a watch and I'm definitely glad I did. Very cool hearing from your perspective. We use FL Studio and feel similar to you! 😎🐀
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Glad to hear it! 😊
@MULTIMAN-MUSIC
@MULTIMAN-MUSIC 6 ай бұрын
Great topic, I’ve been doing the same for quite some time, still have some gear that is hard for me to say goodbye to… but gets rarely used… I’ve been enjoying more the few pieces of gear and software I always use, getting deep and also using field recordings , sampling and experimenting… Productivity is the main reason, for me the thing that helps the most is having my main music PC internet free.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Yeah, I'm in no rush to get rid of absolutely everything. It can be fun to have some stuff that you enjoy. But I certainly didn't need as much as I used to have.
@nochan99
@nochan99 6 ай бұрын
I feel this. I was making music since I was a kid and I got some epic analogue HW. I quickly realized that when I am composing, I need to be in the "zone" and I can only do that on my computer. So I use software when actually making music, but I use my HW to jam and play around to whet my inspiration. Also I think that if you want to "extract" the magic dust from that old gear, you need the whole path to be analogue. As soon as you introduce an AD converter, the gig is up. AD/DA is like a firewall for the magic of the dancing electrons. I also think that this is affected by what style of musician you are. Some musicians just go on a drug trip while recording everything and then when they are sober the next day, they scavenge their recording for the good bits to put into a track. I have a much stronger need for control over my process. It needs to be reproducible and so software really is the only way.
@NegativeTeensMusic
@NegativeTeensMusic 6 ай бұрын
YES! I’ve been doing the exact same thing this year. I found that I FINISH songs that start in Ableton whereas my “dawless” setup never generates songs, just jams that never go anywhere..
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Good to hear! 😊
@NegativeTeensMusic
@NegativeTeensMusic 5 ай бұрын
@@Javeton No, it’s what happens when I decide what works well for me after spending a couple years experimenting with different workflows. But hey, thanks for the free psychoanalysis!
@SteveWeave
@SteveWeave 5 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. Of course we’re strictly talking about here yes? I love working in the box and it makes total sense - but “good” sounds or not there’s nothing like banging on the drums!
@jchase8223
@jchase8223 5 ай бұрын
This is great for everyone here trying to make as many tracks as possible, and it’s their job. It’s why we have 10’s of thousands of new tracks every single day. Personally, I like to play music more than record it and not staring at a screen is actually fun and relaxing, not to mention it’s how a lot of humans used to express feelings. I wonder how many people make a song and actually sit down to play it on a regular basis. I’m not a trained pianist or anything, but with a drum machine, and a keystep plugged into 4 synths I can make a lot of noise that is just for me, not for clicks, posts, or uploads. That being said, GAS as is a bad and pointless thing.
@a.c.2211
@a.c.2211 5 ай бұрын
Totally agree
@Art-zs6sl
@Art-zs6sl 5 ай бұрын
I found a point for it. It kept me interested in playing music! I bought enough stuff to keep my fingers on the instruments and luckily developed some skill in the process. Now, gear matters much less, and I know how to use it and what it is for. It was a fun ride!
@finspire8632
@finspire8632 5 ай бұрын
Exactly and let's not even talk about those cold mouse-pen-pad strained fingers 🙂
@VirtualModular
@VirtualModular 5 ай бұрын
I have a Juno-6 and a few other bits of hardware, but the sounds I find most interesting are just sticking guitar into VCV Rack. You can make almost any sound you can imagine with software modular.
@marial8235
@marial8235 5 ай бұрын
Interesting take. For me, I started before DAWs, so to me hardware is “natural”, and the DAW feels like a lot of work. I probably will never sell certain gear like my 106, w30, Rev2, Jd-XI, but some things will come and go. Modular is beyond my scope thank God,
@thedeepblueskys
@thedeepblueskys 5 ай бұрын
Same here. I have synths I’ll never get rid off like my Virus Ti-1 or Tastychips GR-1, Digitakt & Tone, and some Moog’s. Then my FX pedals like Microcosm, BigSky, Mood, etc…. It all feels totally natural to me, but the one and only DAW I jive with is Reason. It gives me the feeling of actual gear and is super easy to produce with it. A friend let me borrow a couple road cases of Eurorack gear and I just stared at it all the time and never even made a song with it, so I gave it back to him and realized it’s not for me. The learning curve that is.
@suzannealdridge1404
@suzannealdridge1404 5 ай бұрын
I agree I do mixing in the box , I find a good sampler beats a computer every time, and I used live, reason etc, but I personally am not into computer's.
@marial8235
@marial8235 5 ай бұрын
@@suzannealdridge1404 I think if you started during the DAW age, they make sense to people who started out using them. For people like me, who began in my teens back in the 80s, hardware is generally more intuitive. Plus I spend a lot of work time on screen and don’t want to do that in my “fun” time. I do use a ipad Garage band more as a tape recorder or editor. It’s probably about finding what works for each of us and try to avoid universals since there really aren’t any in electronica.
@glensubtorq
@glensubtorq 5 ай бұрын
I have been performing live techno hardware only since 2001. Just last month I stumbled upon a video of Ableton that seemed to finally "reach" me and make me actually consider using Ableton. Now I watch this video and I begin to consider many things. Thanks.
@DreamSounds558
@DreamSounds558 5 ай бұрын
I did the same move and I don't regret it for a second
@BeatsAndGuitars
@BeatsAndGuitars 6 ай бұрын
Man I definitely appreciate this video. I have a ton of gear. I’ve sold a 8K dollar Eurorack system only to buy another 10U system that I have now. While this video doesnt necessarily prompti me to sell my hardware it did give me a good reminder that I need to focus on making music not acquiring that next new “thing”. Like you said it’s not just hardware, it can be plugins and software. Great video I’m happy you’re moving in a positive direction.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Glad to be of inspiration. As I've mentioned, I've been down the modular rabbit hole myself, so I know what you're talking about. But don't go selling your stuff because some guy on KZbin told you to. 😉 I'm not saying my way is the only way. It's just what works for me.
@BeatsAndGuitars
@BeatsAndGuitars 6 ай бұрын
@@mariuscircus totally understand and respect it.
@railpressureflip
@railpressureflip 5 ай бұрын
This is great, I condone this hardcore!
@natethebesttt
@natethebesttt 5 ай бұрын
I’m happy to see you kept the microcosm. It is such an inspiring and unique piece of gear that can’t be emulated 1:1
@nilsliebich1822
@nilsliebich1822 6 ай бұрын
Very true discussion. I own a lot of gear and sometimes I feel overwhelmed by toi much outboard gear. I try just to focus on one piece and not trying to replace my Ableton Mixing out of the Box…
@brucewayne251
@brucewayne251 5 ай бұрын
Plugins good for the home guy, hardware for the studio. It’s more inspiring to have physical gear and a good marketing tool
@djmumma
@djmumma 5 ай бұрын
Great video. Just starting out with music production and I’m already identifying with what you are saying here. I don’t have much space and also don’t want to spent a lot of potential creative time, on being my own tech support. Right now, learning the craft seems more important. I also think as a person, you will find what works for you and evolve. Maybe using more kit, or going in mostly in the box. No right or wrong, but right for you. Make good music that you like, be original 😊
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
Nice one! Good luck with it. People like you are exactly who I'm trying to help with this channel. 😊
@truthministry.
@truthministry. 5 ай бұрын
I did the same, over 30 years in music production (all electronic) and at one point had a studio full of pretty much every mono and poly you can name. Now I have just 3 synths, one classic and two Behringer (they are actually good at sounding just like the old machines); no more synth tech bills, rare parts when old machines break down, and most of all MORE focus on what I do have. Less is definitely more when it comes to production.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
Totally. I have a tiny studio, and could hardly move in there the way it was.
@romanyel
@romanyel 5 ай бұрын
My problem with working solely on a computer is that it doesn't sound as good live through a sound system. I've used the same sequencer on both and it just doesn't sound as rich. But having both options is a big gift.
@WrvrUgoThrUR
@WrvrUgoThrUR 5 ай бұрын
I toyed with the idea of selling everything, but I ended up just breaking everything down and tucking it away for about three months. I didn’t watch any KZbin gear vids and none of the synth live streams. The difference with me is, my goal is not only to produce music, but just tinkering with the gear-getting all synced and just jamming. So for that reason I would have regretted selling everything. But still I totally see your side of the gear game.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
Yeah, no reason doing this unless it feels right. For me, it was time.
@KPIce
@KPIce 5 ай бұрын
I feel you, man! I'm also selling all my music hardware now!
@KPIce
@KPIce 5 ай бұрын
Except for my double bass 🎻 I call her Bella. She’s a keeper-the love of my life 🥰
@b00ts4ndc4ts
@b00ts4ndc4ts 5 ай бұрын
I love a great bass guitar with flat wound strings. I would choose it over midi all the time. I use an old Park head with a 4x10 cab. I use a sm57 halfway between the centre and the edge of one of the drivers, l also use a Behringer C-1 in phase at the back of the cab (opened back cab when recording) i get a real good bit of punch doing it this way. So if I had to choose, my bass is at the top of the keeper list.
5 ай бұрын
Don’t have to wait for gear to get in tune is an important argument. Using softsynths in a DAW gets the result much closer to the inspiration. And no broken filters and troubleshooting is very beneficial for creative work!
@WrathOfWood
@WrathOfWood 5 ай бұрын
part of the fun is performing with the live equipment, which takes up such a small amount of time compared to the majority of the work that is done with daws for chopping, arranging, mixing etc. thats just modern workflow
@jonathandavies9451
@jonathandavies9451 6 ай бұрын
Great topic! It's sometimes hard to admit that we need to do actual work of music making rather than buying more gear! I managed recently with the EP-133 to not buy it and instead bought a pair of studio monitors so that other people ca hear my music and also played more around with my existing sounds which was a much better use of time and money.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Yeah, I was guilty of this for longer than I'd like to admit. And still have to watch myself. I find not watching demos helps a lot. That got way easier after I cut down significantly on the time I spend on Instagram.
@semyonboyk0
@semyonboyk0 5 ай бұрын
Similar experience for me - moving into the box felt liberating and made me way more productive. The only problem I've encountered is that it just doesn't look as cool when you are trying to record a video performance of your track (not that I did many of them either way, but still). Watching hardware with blinking lights is way more engaging for a viewer than watching a laptop or a screen capture with a DAW timeline.
@johnw65uk
@johnw65uk 5 ай бұрын
Well done, it's tough and the withdraw symptoms can be deadly. Just take each day at a time and you will get through it. Ive been clean for 4 years, I just occasionally dabble with a triangle I have under the stars. Just to keep a little rhythm in my life. But I feel like a great weight off my shoulders, and I can finally afford to feed my kids more than bread and milk.
@AmbientMusicStudio
@AmbientMusicStudio 5 ай бұрын
I came to a similar realization after starting down the modular rabbit hole.
@DmitryPuffin
@DmitryPuffin 6 ай бұрын
I am at the same point as you are. I went full circle from making music just on computer (even without midi keyboard), then buying hardware and doing DAWless live performances, and now going back to computer just because its more efficient way to finish music. I will never sell my Novation Circuit tho, its still part of my live rig and I learned it so well, so I can jam on it on the fly quickly during live.
@dennisrochat7747
@dennisrochat7747 5 ай бұрын
Can totally understand your story, looks clean & ace! Was wondering if you still got the Cirklon but I saw it in the vid. How about the Cwejman? Gone forever?
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
No, still have the Cwejman. Just put it to the side for a while. It's among those things I'm a little reluctant to sell until a bit more time has passed. ;-)
@coyote-wang
@coyote-wang 5 ай бұрын
Yeah the audio resolution is such that the emulations sound as good as the "real" synth but without the impact on the environment.
@anythingbox
@anythingbox 5 ай бұрын
I hope you kept a few favorites.
@0711RC
@0711RC 6 ай бұрын
Thanks for your story.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@MisterKristopher
@MisterKristopher 5 ай бұрын
We’ll be able to make music with our thoughts soon.
@rhinoskin7550
@rhinoskin7550 5 ай бұрын
Heres a comment for your algo. Lol If you're broke or just starting, everything has been in the box for a longgg time, its such a blessing. Good speakers, DAW, and room treatment. Good to go.
@juno6
@juno6 6 ай бұрын
Sorry mate. I wish you a soon recovery.
@Kung_Fu_Jesus
@Kung_Fu_Jesus 6 ай бұрын
I’ve made that mistake of selling all your kit before and thinking that going into the box is better and simpler and more productive. Nothing beats Flying a real physical synthesiser
@Cookie-Yeah197
@Cookie-Yeah197 6 ай бұрын
Glad I never started buying loads of hardware, I did start down that route but realised pretty quicky you don't actually need much to make music. I now use a DAW, Spectrasonics Omnisphere and Elektron Analogue Rytm Mk2....that's its and the possibilities are still endless.
@gagaxueguzheng
@gagaxueguzheng 5 ай бұрын
I'm still fascinated with blinking hardware and complicated looking cables. It has a awesome look to it that makes me want to own it. But I'll also stick to software because it's far too expensive and bulky. And music making is just one of my many hobbies.
@Cookie-Yeah197
@Cookie-Yeah197 5 ай бұрын
@@gagaxueguzheng Yeah same I've got tons of hobbies haha
@brendanpatrickmusic
@brendanpatrickmusic 5 ай бұрын
Definitely understand where you're coming from. I first bought a Minilogue XD, then a Casio SK-1, and then a JUNO-X, an realized recently that just those 3 is already a lot with my guitars haha. Each one (besides the SK1) have their own learning curves and I haven't fully utilized 100% of their capabilities. I have to tell myself this every time I see a Prophet demo or something lol. One has to go if I get a new one.
@styvesgoupil
@styvesgoupil 5 ай бұрын
Nice video, I need that kind of content, little bit of a GAS here also ;) I realise I fiddle with lot's of toys but I become less productive, it feeds my geeky needs more than serve my music. By the way just checked your Spotify and the song Zipped gives me a Undeworld vibe (the british band, not the movie lol), which is for me a considerable compliment, I loved their work for 25 years now and I don't get bored of it over the years. Good job :)
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
Thanks! Happy to hear you're enjoying the music! 😊
@DjJay
@DjJay 5 ай бұрын
I've been doing music for 15 ish years and don't own a single piece of hardwarre, totally in the box since day one. ☺️
@SPAZZOID100
@SPAZZOID100 5 ай бұрын
why?
@DjJay
@DjJay 5 ай бұрын
@@SPAZZOID100 Not worth it.
@robertgrabowski2265
@robertgrabowski2265 6 ай бұрын
I totally agree with you. Stop watching youtube, turn off the computer and start making music on some box. My box is MPC Live 2 with plugins.
@SeanOBrien888
@SeanOBrien888 6 ай бұрын
I’ve done the same thing. I’ve been a musician and sound engineer all my life. I play multiple instruments. So I had LOTS of gear. But it’s all gone. Everything is in the box now. I only have a few guitars, 2 bass guitars, a few other stringed instruments. A few midi keyboard controllers and a midi drum controller. All my amps, effects and even compressors and such are all in the box. I must say it makes life a lot easier and it takes up way less space and draws a lot less electricity. Also I can take everything with me wherever I go. I can work on at the beach if I want. It couldn’t do that with all the heavy gear before.
@nor44lab
@nor44lab 5 ай бұрын
When my kids came along I sold all my hardware and was left pretty much with a laptop and push2. ITB is definitely better for producing final tracks. What I do miss though is the little fun-boxes like the OP-1 that you can just pick up and groove/jam on, have fun without being too analytical. i find that once you're in front of a computer it's a bit less of a jam and more analytical, too precise. The trick though on a computer is to do less tweaking and fine-tuning as you go and just jam and worry about perfecting sounds/eq-ing etc later.
@njcity
@njcity 5 ай бұрын
I've had a couple of friends go through exactly the same journey (to working pretty much only ITB). From my own experiences, and seeing those of others, my opinion is that a large majority of the people who claim that they could never give up their hardware are deceiving themselves. I was exactly the same way with books and e-readers: I stoutly refused the notion of giving up the touch, the smell, and the physical interaction of turning paper pages for an electronic device for years. That is, until someone bought me a Kindle. The same applies to vinyl enthusiasts and film camera users. You can digtially replicate the "vinyl sound" (hint: it's just saturation) (disclaimer: a very, very small set of vinyl records are mastered differently than their CD counterpart, but this is the exception rather than the rule), and you can digitally manufacture any film effects. Objectively, with a modern computer you can get anything you had with analogue in the digital space. Any reasoning to stay with the old is therefore not logical, but emotional. I suspect that many can't admit to themselves that they simply don't want to learn or acclimatise themselves to something new. Many are also emotionally party to a sunk-cost fallacy (if you already have $10,000 vinyl record collection and a $10,000 turntable + stylus setup, going digital effectively makes it all worth $0 _to you_, even though you can sell the equipment on). I'm more than happy with all the extra space I have from going digital everywhere - no more turntables, vinyls, books, retro-consoles, synths, etc. cluttering up my living room - but as is with clothing brands, I think a lot of people need this "clutter" around to impress their "identity" upon the world (...not that I would ever tell them so brutally, otherwise I wouldn't have any friends left!). Now... about the number of colleagues who seem to have accidently angled their webcams directly towards the shelves full of books that they'll never read a second time...
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
Sounds like we're of similar mindsets mate. It probably comes at no surprise that I'm currently in the process of getting rid of all my vinyl too. ;-)
@jelnet
@jelnet 5 ай бұрын
Great video. And this speaks to the acquisition of any type of gear: plugins, pedals, synths etc. the acquiring of which has far more to do with a dopamine hit and much less to do with making music. I bet we've all got stuff we've bought that we haven't even scratched the surface of, I know I have. Far better to make use of what we have before getting something new. Back in the day all I had was a Roland D20, an acoustic guitar and a portastudio, and I was way way more productive then than I've ever been since with all the choices I now have at my disposal. Instead of pulling the trigger on new gear, we need to sit down and think, imagine trawling through the manual of that new piece of gear, scratching our head, maybe hitting a brick wall and having to go on forums etc. to get it to do something we hoped it would do, and instead, get the manual out on that piece of gear we already have and see what we can make that do! Thanks for your insights and good luck with your streamlining!
@peaksandvalleys4217
@peaksandvalleys4217 5 ай бұрын
good for you! focus on what is there is good I think
@strangeattractor4959
@strangeattractor4959 5 ай бұрын
3:13 Nice...what brand are those midi cc black knobs they look so kool to automate.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
Hey! It's Midi Fighter Twister.
@zentriceggofficial
@zentriceggofficial 5 ай бұрын
Interesting. This is a feeling I've been having at the back of my mind. I haven't acted on it yet. For many years I had only the box and then started going back to hardware as well. Now gathering hardware, but I'm aware that buying new hardware can become more of a focus than actually creating. As you also mention, you have to avoid doing the same with plugins. I will limit the hardware I buy from this point. If you're constantly adding new hardware or software then you become master of none. This has also been discussed in terms of music creation as well. I believe Jean Michel Jarre made the point that his early music was made with a limited number of tracks and having that restriction ultimately helped his music. Less can be more.
@robertmailloux3720
@robertmailloux3720 5 ай бұрын
I agree! As a guitar player I had many Boogies,Fender and all. I kept my favorite one and now just work with an Apollo and a few IRs..Work with Reason which I can integrate perfectly with Logic.All sounds great! Got rid of a lot of stuff . I just buy pedals when good ones come out.I have the new Boss IR 2 that I really recommend because of the effects loop to get the tones of your pedalboard if you are a guitarist.Have a good life!
@suzannealdridge1404
@suzannealdridge1404 5 ай бұрын
Yeh, i agree as a Guitarist,
@ExpectResistance
@ExpectResistance 5 ай бұрын
Great video, nice and relaxed presentation, which I appreciate. It’s interesting that we might think nobody cares what gear you use, but if the views from this video are anything to go by, people clearly do care. Do we care if they care though i guess is the question. In a blind test, i agree, things are pretty close between hardware and software, which is amazing, although how often do we actually listen to music this way, or make music this way. It’s always an odd justification, and ultimately they are different in many ways, which is worth considering, as you clearly have. Personally i like both the similarities and differences, whatever works for your goal, which in my case is creating music, and sometimes enjoying that. I had no gear in the 80’s and early 90’s, then loads of gears mid 90’s, then sold most of it in the early 2000’s to work in the computer, then bought it all back and then some in recent years. With 35 years doing music, I’ve learned that either with loads of gear or just being in the box, it’s whatever works for you, is what works, which sounds exactly where you are currently. The larger issue i often hear, is feel guilty about owning gear or as you mentioned a little yourself, not using gear and it being “sat on a shelf”. That’s what shelves are for. Also, what about all those plugins not being used? I feel this points more to a narrative we have developed, and influenced by, that gear sat “doing nothing” is bad. I don’t believe it has to be that way. Equally, we don’t need to feel sad or bad to sell and buy again, we change and so to think the world/studio around us must also be the same is an odd but common thought. You mention keeping stuff that might be hard to get again, makes a lot of sense. I sold a Juno 60, a synth I loved, as felt i could always get another one as i couldn’t see the price going up much more. I sold mine for £200 🤦‍♀️ still, not having that synth has been good too, and the JU06a is great, although a very different machine, as are the soft synths. Be careful of plugin purchases, i can sense you still have yet to loose that purchase urge, but equally no stress if you buy stuff. Nice video and good luck with the channel. I can’t bring myself to do these sorts of videos but appreciate you have. Thx 💜
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
Thanks for the kind words mate. I appreciate your message. And all your points are valid. I think you're right that in the guilt thing certainly plays a part for lots of us. I've certainly felt that too. For me it's also a part of bigger thing I think. As you get older, you suddenly find yourself with having acquired a lot of stuff. In all areas of your life. And it's sometimes a bit of a relief getting rid of some of the clutter. Which explains the popularity of all these cleaning and tidying books these days.
@billaveda6408
@billaveda6408 5 ай бұрын
Same here. Five years ago. Sold all of my analog gear and switched to software and external midi-controllers. Desk and laptop computers are light years faster than they were 20 years ago.
@Charlesbabbage2209
@Charlesbabbage2209 6 ай бұрын
July 2024: Why I put my computer away and started making music with a Juno106 and a four track.
@3DaveO
@3DaveO 6 ай бұрын
Yes, I totally agree; every new piece of equipment that is mid-range requires learning, like Boss RC505-2. I have hardly used it because I have to learn more. The only thing that I don't like is having to use the mouse due to RSI. It would be good if I could map my midi keyboard keystep 37 to be able to type instead of the computer keyboard:) coz it doesn't seem to increase my rsi like heavy mouse or keyboard use.
@mattgooderson
@mattgooderson 5 ай бұрын
You kept the Cirklon - do you use that much with your new ITB methodology - or is it just a painful sell?
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
Yeah. Haven't used it much lately, but as you say it's a painful sell. Figured I'd keep it around for at least another year to be absolutely certain. 😉
@stephanearnoux
@stephanearnoux 5 ай бұрын
For me learning Ableton, playing with the push and a midi keyboard, working with samples and plugin is a perfect way to compose and play live, with a compact setup. I kept some hardware, just wich sounds better to me, and can stay on my desk in an ergonomic way. So i can play dawless and jam, or creating sets in Ableton, or going live with a few things.
@downpatmusic
@downpatmusic 4 ай бұрын
It's amazing as a professional of decades to see this transformation to computer based replacements of all of this hardware. For Ex., I recently purchase the Rhodes Music Mark 8 Pro plug in made by Rhodes Music. I loaded it up and it sounded just like Rhodes Music new $10,000 electric piano. In fact the only improvement in the actual physical instrument is the effects section when ABing. Where the hardware is nice is in the physical control aspect especially if you are a trained keyboardist, or classical pianist. We expect playable keyboard to execute parts. For example, we need an 88 note weighted controller for playing piano sample. I like the Kawai VPC-1 triple strike keyboard. (Nord uses it in their keyboards I believe and Kawaii sells them). For synth action I like the Nord Wave 2 waterfall keyboard for it fast action for synth part playing and for its waterfall keyboard for organ parts.
@brendonmoeller
@brendonmoeller 6 ай бұрын
The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom. Keep it up brother
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Hehe! I'll do my best man.
@brendonmoeller
@brendonmoeller 6 ай бұрын
@@mariuscircus all we can do brotha
@CrusaderGeneral
@CrusaderGeneral 5 ай бұрын
Music creator and gear collector are two, usually mutually exclusive, identities
@Equanimsoundhealing
@Equanimsoundhealing 5 ай бұрын
Agree! Watching youtube for new gear can keep wanting to trade in save for more.. its best to watch videos for gear you have to learn how to use better. Or watch other gear for ideas that can make with own gear. And software is amazing and most people have way more software than they use and dont maximize what it can do, without even adding external gear to it. believe I'm reaching this point have all hardware I need. And it is a very peaceful place to be content with what you have and focus on using it better :)
@ZipSnipe
@ZipSnipe 5 ай бұрын
Good for you, it takes a while to get strong to realize that you have GAS . For over 30 years I did the same thing, and then one day I realized everything I do is so much easier with just a keyboard controller ,daw and vst’s. No more hassle of noise in the line, and then trying to also learn all the different operating systems of all the different devices, which takes away from making actual music. But there will be those gas heads who are still suffering from the addiction.
@BITE_MECHANISM
@BITE_MECHANISM 5 ай бұрын
most gear is usually inspirational for just a few weeks, luckily I'm not a hoarder and sold most before getting something else 😕 which sometimes makes me sad but like you said it mostly is a distraction 😂
@woven5121
@woven5121 6 ай бұрын
I have done the same. Only kept my Roland SH 101.
@hombre6483
@hombre6483 5 ай бұрын
Softsynths sound absolutely fantastic nowadays! Most of them are totally convincing in my opinion. I only use hardware synths for fun and when I want to produce a certain music style.
@EnrizeStockMusic
@EnrizeStockMusic 5 ай бұрын
Get a Bitwig! GRID is an awesome modular environment in a DAW, you can create everything in the box. Watching your video its exactly what you need
@abletonflow4673
@abletonflow4673 5 ай бұрын
100% Agree. I have many purchased plugins and some pieces of hardware and the truth is that I feel that with only Ableton and nothing else I can do everything I want. I promise not to buy anything else. I feel 100% like you. greetings
@mrkeeny
@mrkeeny 5 ай бұрын
I only keep things that can’t be emulated in the box. Moogerfoogers, tx802, Dfam etc etc
@LukeLine
@LukeLine 5 ай бұрын
Felt this 👏🏽
@poindextertunes
@poindextertunes 6 ай бұрын
Honestly the only thing you need hardware for is its harmonics for vocals and mixing/mastering. And even then, I get some great sounding vocals and masters ITB. Harmonics plugins are getting REAL good these days 🔥
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Plugins have come a really long way since the last time I made music ITB.
@2ndattention
@2ndattention 5 ай бұрын
I sold off everything except my Push and Minifreak this past year. Best decision I ever made. In some paradoxical way I feel more creatively liberated now.
@pumpureliai
@pumpureliai 6 ай бұрын
I've been making music for about 20 years, in various genres and styles, mainly pop songs. What I see time after time, most young producers are trying to cheat what can't be cheated - buying expensive gear, when the main focus should be learning music composition and audio engineering. All that hardware stuff is too much distraction, and it is very hard to prepare hardware setup for effective work when you need to write a lot of different music. At the moment I have only Reason DAW with no additional rack extensions whatsoever, and TDR NOVA dynamic eq. For vocal recordings, I use Shure SM58 (with some custom-made windscreens to help control heights. That's it. While my colleagues spent thousands of euros buying the most expensive stuff - mics, synths, etc. and records almost nothing worthwhile in years, I'm just cooking songs one after another. Nowadays even in the software realm, there is so much distracting marketing bullshit... It's just sad to look at. If someone wants to have fun, buy one gear and stick with it, play and have fun. But if you want to be productive - choose the most stable DAW that has most of the stuff (instruments and effects) already in it.
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 6 ай бұрын
Yeah, there's no magic bullet that will make you good at this stuff.
@TheBroDotTV
@TheBroDotTV 6 ай бұрын
I agree with most of your points to be honest. Most of it resonated with me. I got lot of hardware too but hardly use it. I'm just more creative in the box. That said I don't want to lose the buzz of hardware because I have some nice stuff. Great video anyways.
@jamesmitchell8052
@jamesmitchell8052 5 ай бұрын
whats the best portable keyboard and drum oad combo u can recommend and ofcourse a mac laptop i assume M1 or I7 chip?
@mariuscircus
@mariuscircus 5 ай бұрын
I have an Arturia Keylab Mini. The Akai MPK Mini is probably just as good, and even a bit smaller. As far as laptop goes, my M1 MacBook Air works fine.
@Pintosonic
@Pintosonic 5 ай бұрын
I never started modular but I always had about a dozen synthesizers. The only plugins I used were audio effects. But mainly because most new synths that came out in the last two years were either grossly overpriced or were not interesting to me, I stopped buying hardware and started using VSTi whenever I wanted something different. Nowadays I’d say that 50-60% of the tracks in any project I do are from VSTi. I came to the conclusion that at the end of the day it doesn’t matter. I’m still using my hardware synths because I like the workflow but I could do something equivalent using only plugins. The sound quality of plugins is so good that even professional mixing and mastering engineers are dumping their expensive hardware and are working 100% in the box.
@b.h.gargantua301
@b.h.gargantua301 5 ай бұрын
Just keep one single awesome hardware synth as your main keyboard, controller and toy to joy! I went through the same process and felt a lack of immediate listen what you thouch interaction.
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