I used audacity for a while. It was an interesting workflow to say the least, especially since I wasn’t using any plugins to make it work better.I use Audacity because it’s cheaper than anything, is super simple (that’s also one of its flaws: it don’t do much), and I have been using it for like 10 years. It’s like tape, though. Once it’s done it’s done. Want to take that reverb you added to that backup vocal? Only if you undo everything you’ve done in the meantime. I need to upgrade, but I don’t really feel like learning a new program at the moment…
I used audacity for a while. It was an interesting workflow to say the least, especially since I wasn’t using any plugins to make it work better.
All of this was recorded in audacity with a cheap single channel interface.
No amp sims, though I did use a line 6 spider IV with the preamp bypassed as an outboard reverb unit, and there’s one track where I ran the infamous insane channel into the interface with the levels set so it was completely clipping in the interface to get a nasty digital clipping sound for a few small overdubs. Otherwise it’s all just my Les Paul into either a Hendrix fuzz face mini (all the drive tones are the fuzz face with the volume rolled back, and occasionally set to just slightly overload the interface for just a tad bit of janky clipping), a bass whammy, or a cheapo looper pedal. Only one pedal at a time though, as a fun little limitation. The only part that isn’t my Les Paul on any of it is the 8 string bass part.
Audacity is far from what I would call my tool of choice, but it’s huge limitations are a fun creative aid.
![]()
These days it's Reaper. Just because it works on literally every comp (Mac and PC) I've ever used it on. For tracking a band there is nothing better IMO. It just runs! I enjoy Garageband and Logic but I HATE being limited to specific hardware. I first heard of Reaper while I was working on 360 video back in 2018 and needed a proper DAW instead of Adobe Audition (which used to be Cool Edit Pro!) that I had been hobbling along on since I started working in video back around '05. Before that it was Sony Vegas and Sony Acid as they were the only apps I could get to run on my cheap ass, low end hardware. I ran Cool Edit Pro 2.0 as my first DAW back in the 90s. Mang, comps where TERRIBLE back then! Recording a couple tracks, no problem...more than four?!?...major problems (for us anyways). It still blows my mind how easy it is and the selection we have these days!
Cool Edit Pro became Adobe Audition, and that ability to switch between destructive and non-destructive editing is still there (and still extemely useful). It's a terrible piece of software for trying to make music but it works a treat for other kinds of audio work.It has a MIDI editor and VST support, not sure that it has an included instrument though.
The one thing I miss about Cool Edit Pro is how easy it was to select multiple tracks and mix them into a single track. I know Reaper has all sorts of non-destructive methods intentionally, and the "Render" option, but with CEP it was a matter of two clicks and the tracks were mixed together in-place, as-is, forever. There are times I want that kind of simplicity.
Looking back at screenshots, however, shows how much that software has aged.![]()
But that’s where the tone comes from…I don't have to look at some loading splash screen while it reticulates splines.