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10 reasons to start making music on a laptop

If you haven’t gone portable yet, this is why you should

Ben Rogerson, Fri 11 Jul 2008, 3:17 pm UTC

10 reasons to start making music on a laptop

Controllers such as Korg's forthcoming nanoSeries devices are making the studio more portable than ever.

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5. The world becomes your studio
An obvious one, this, but it can't be said too many times that if you've got a laptop, you can make music anywhere. The dream of creating a chillout opus while you're lying on the beach can become a beautiful reality – just make sure you don't get sand in your keyboard.

6. You can make more of your time
Many of us spend half our lives commuting to and from work on trains, and it's all too easy to waste that time reading free newspapers that don't really tell us anything. If you're got a laptop, though, these lost hours can be turned into creative music-making time – who knows, you might just be able to produce an entire album during journeys to and from the office?

7. You can save space
We'd all love to live in six-bedroom houses, but if you've got a shoebox-sized flat or you're sharing a place with friends, space is going to be at a premium and you're not going to have much room for recording gear. Do everything in a laptop, though, and you can pack your studio away whenever you're not using it, and when you are, you won't need much space at all.

8. You can start DJing
Most of us have now got huge collections of music files sitting on our hard disks, but once these have been transferred to our iPods, they don't serve a great deal of purpose. If you've got laptop, though, you can easily transform yourself into a play-anywhere DJ – just download a bit of free mixing software such as Native Instruments Beatport Sync and you're away.

9. It aids collaboration
Exchanging project files is all well and good, but if you want to make music with someone else, nothing beats being in the same room with them. Of course, it's possible for two people to work together on the same computer, but laptop jamming – an activity that involves two or more people linking up their laptops and making music together in real time – is becoming increasingly popular.

10. It makes you look cool
Although they might not admit it, one of the reasons that many people buy a laptop for music is because they think it'll make them look good. Nothing wrong with that, we say – if people are impressed at the sight of you making a tune in Live in the local coffee shop, so be it. It's certainly going to be a conversation starter, and might even help you to form some beautiful friendships.

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User comments (2)

  • somethingstarted

    Avatar for somethingstarted

    Fri 11 Jul 2008, 6:16 pm UTC

    what's the specs on it? oh and make sure you ahve about 3 gigs of ram (amd preferibly), a wireless mouse cuz that pad would be realy hard to work with, and about 500gigs of hardrive. you also may want to replace the microsoft sound card with the one of your choice, visit a computer store (NOT walmart by all means), they'll help you. AND DONT FORGET! if you use vista your screwed, because it is still heavily unstable for things like music and video production, gaming, and recording. stick with xp if you like pcs.

    Mark as inappropriate

  • matey

    Avatar for matey

    Fri 11 Jul 2008, 5:39 pm UTC

    I'm sold. Is an Asus Eee PC good enough?

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