Wacky1 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 06, 2023 6:40 pm
...
I feel like videos that I try to watch on the matter don't really seem to address the basic points and principles when trying to understand the software and music production itself. Its almost like everyone who uses a DAW is an expert who's been using them for years while there is no real noob friendly channels or guides for it.
Anyone here know of any such channels, sites, blogs? Also be free to share any of your stories if you're struggling with understanding it as well.
Been there - done that. I got an Ableton Live
Lite license with some hardware several years ago. Tried it on my own - but didn't succeed.
After that I played around with several DAWs on iPad and Mac (Garageband, Cubase, FL Studio etc.) but none of them "felt right" for me. So I came back to Live

to give it another try. This time I made my first steps with the help of the
tutorial for beginners from borntoproduce.com and this helped me
a lot! The first 4 (of 19) lessons are free. After watching these I decided to buy the full course and didn't regret it. Jon Merritt explains everything in an easy to follow way and you build a whole track from scratch. For me this is the perfect way to learn. BTW: This course uses Arrangement view right from the beginning.
The
videos on the Ableton site are great also but they just explain single topics. Good for diving into some features - but IMO not so good to get the big picture.
Another video I can recommend for beginners is
Ableton Live 11 Beginner Tutorial from Tomas George. Beware that this is also just a "teaser" for a complete course and that it uses Session view though.
Learning a DAW (and music production in general) isn't an easy thing. It takes time, patience and practice. Of all the DAWs I got in touch with Ableton Live has the most logical approach so I think it's worth to make the effort to master it.
BTW: To be able to completely follow most of the tutorials you will probably need at least Ableton Live
Intro (with Live Lite you will hit the 8 track restriction soon). There is one exception though: The
How to make a track in Ableton Live Lite series from MusicRadar is explicitely made for Live
Lite. Completely free and well made!

Should have mentioned this first maybe.