/prod/

is it worth learning pro tools? Its gotta be the least user friendly DAW I've used

i listened to your track all the way through
i like the vocal chops. i think you could make the track more concise and it might make you happier with it. parts that come in at :40 and at 2:00 could be cut (hopefully you know which parts i mean). get to your destination faster, those are the parts where your mind might wander and find elements stale imo.
dope track though!

There's a lot of deficiencies in people's abilites, unfortunately the guys who spend half an hour on a daw they just got then post, its a fucking waste of time, of course its going to be terrible if you don't learn anything beforehand.

Tone is important, Equing, compression, all these I feel most prod people don't know shit about

If you want to work in a studio in the future, yes.
Otherwise, no. No need for it.

its ironic that every /prod/ thread began with all those invaluable resources that no one seemed to bother with

Not sure if it would work or not, but mayne you can try usIng convolution, then apply phase inversion one way or another.
If there's a way without a specific program that does it, then this is it.
There probably isn't though.

>But what if ot had interesting discussions about non-basic things?
You'd have more incentive to come here, no?

I would for sure.

>tfw learning how to use FL Studio
>make a simple loop that you really like
>realize it's probably trash

How do I get over this feeling?

Well yeah, the few times I've seen someone go in depth they were lauhed at and told that it's pointless to care about those things, which is completely the opposite of amentality that promotes improvement.

ive been doing this for a few years and still feel this way