Hey guysโฆsorry to be late to the partyโฆ here some of my humble experienceโฆ
A) Iโve been producing electronic and house music for a while and managing my label in London remotely, some years agoโฆ
Built a small home-studio and then dismantled it and composing on the goโฆ
B) These days, hardware is just a style choice. I have hardware gear at home (keyboards, synths, microphones, speakers, controllers, audio interfaces, mixers, etc) but on the road I just stay with AKG headphones (soon to be replaced with Audio Technica, def. better now), I got a small Samson USB mic (amazing for podcasts, acceptable for voice demos and ideas); Akai mini-keys (I used to bring Maschine with me, but itโs pretty useless, apart for live gigs, as you can do everything with the mini-keyboard or draw it on screen and you save tons of kilos and inspections). If you just need 1 audio input, thereโs an amazing little box from Focusrite called VRM box. Essentially, it recreates (coupled with a free software) various studio monitor ambiences for mix purposes. But itโs also a basic audio interface for 1 in/1 out.
C) These days, Iphone/Ipad apps from major brands like Korg, Arturia, Serato, NI, you can do everything you want in the box and in the phone.
D) Dunno if itโs just a coincidence, but I took most paying client brands when on the road without gear. Of course my advice is:
- if you are comfortable with the results, in case of smaller brands, own projects, libraries or internal use commercials (so they wonโt be played with huge speakers in festivals or terraces), you can do the mix and master in the box (if you are used to, with excellent headphones and speaker environment simulators)
- if you have to work with major brands/artists for public use, commercial use or whatever you know you need 110% quality, you can outsource part of the mix and the master. I did sometimes, with a partner I got in London.
Same for editing video. And also same with audio if time-jammed: if you donโt have the time to edit all the drops, builders, note quantify, fade-in and outs and all the editing stuff and you have the margins to do that, while taking on other clients and working on the creative side, do it. Yes ,you miss some bucks but you gain tons of minutiae-saved time, sanity and inspiration.
Anyhow, music as a nomad is not that reliable these days (as a static neither). Iโm still seeking a new biz model to solve this shit.
Years ago, that was the reason I delved into online affiliate marketing and tech startups and I never managed to get out of that abyss. I was in a quest to find a new profitable revenue model for artists like me and these days Iโm working on a nutrition and cosmetic startup, so you could imagine how far that road led me ![:wink: :wink:]()
But always remeber the why you startedโฆ
Letโs connect guys, we need to revive the music businessโฆ