This, a million times. I love Helm, but Vital utterly thrashes it. If you do any sort of music in any capacity, you owe it to yourself to have it in your VST folder.
If you've ever been curious about stepping into music but don't know where to start, this is it. It's dead simple to understand and starts at the ground-level, working your way up to a functional understanding of harmony and rhythm.
I love this! The in-browser synthesis here was a big inspiration for my side-project (https://noise.sh, spreadsheet for sound design). The WebAudio spec actually makes much of this trivial.
When there is so much improvements needed in Ableton I don't feel easy about them procrastinating in such directions. It's a great toy, but they seem to be overly focusing on luring beginners in, while abandoning professionals. Those people will start their journey with Ableton only to become frustrated that their DAW of choice doesn't do many basic things other DAWs do.
How many years did we have to wait for comping?
Really impressed with Ableton continuously creating easy-to-use / easy-to-learn music tools for 2 decades by now. Spent so many hours experimenting in Ableton when I was in high school, already more than a decade ago. Which indirectly taught me a lot about electronics, computers & programming.
+1 for VCV rack, but it's really only useful when you know exactly what you need. I still lose my mind over inconsequential stuff like linking my envelope to my VCA, or mixing up some routing in a massive project.
It's a modular synthesizer emulator with a ton of free modules available - it's very useful for all sorts of sound design and experimentation when you don't know anything at all about what you want. Sometimes I will spend an hour just to learn something totally new about a module, or re-arrange module orders and get a different sound, etc, or experiment with a new idea with no particular song or goal in mind.
You have limitless 'room' in your case - I would recommend thinking of modules in blocks as if each group was a small synth with a goal - these modules are your drone, those modules are your lead, those modules handle percussion, etc. It also greatly simplifies thinking about routing between these groups. If you want to sync two groups of modules you need to figure out what's acting as the clock for both groups and make sure its the same or synced, etc.
There are modules that let you leave notes and put labels on things as well, so you can remember what you were trying to do and what was plugged where.
I love it. I would guess I spend 3x as long in VCV rack just trying new things out as I do with a particular goal in mind, and its all productive time.
Get Started Making Music - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20965386 - Sept 2019 (184 comments)
Learning Synths - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20272346 - June 2019 (172 comments)
Get started making music - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14299628 - May 2017 (461 comments)