Started @ 13 learning to play guitar,... hack-self-taught guitar.
By age 18, I got the urge to do tape-on-tape cassette overdubbing of my jams,... & I was hooked on recording. Tape-on-tape overdubs were of a horrible sound quality, and hiss up to there, but I had gotten the recording bug. At that time, I used to live, dream & drool over the "new" Tascam 144 Portastudio, then a fabulous new invention for musicians & songwriters, a self contained 4-track recorder & onboard mixer. Sweet.
FF to age 21, when I was finally able to afford a real recorder, the then "state of the art" Tascam 244. I got the 244 and still have it to this day, and despite a couple bouts of maintenance, it's still a mint piece of gear, and still records & sounds great.
Then, within a year, [82-83] I got a new guitar [Ibanez Blazer] and new bass [Peavy T-40], plus a handful of accessories, and was pretty well set, musically & with studio-gear. I've always had a "keep it simple" ethic I've followed in the studio, and a few good pieces of gear was all I needed.
Very soon after that, [about 1983], I scored the "new" Tascam 38 1/2"-8-track & "new" Tascam M30 8x4x2x2 mixer. I did many 8-track productions, considering my budget limitations and the $45/reel tape cost, which was a considerable expense at that time. Now, I consider tape cost a minimal expense, as compared to everything else, but I still have those old archive reels from the '80s.
My 4th piece of gear was not until 1997, when I scored a "new" Tascam 424mkII, my second Portastudio recorder. By then, I had developed a need to be able to run NORMAL speed cassettes in my 4-track, to enable me to overdub on some raw stereo jam tapes that were made in a normal-speed cassette deck,... PLUS, the fact that my 244 was then serving as a PA/vocal mixer for my live-in-studio jams, and I needed the second 4-track cassette Portastudio to continue recording on 4-track cassette.
Since then, I've acquired a ton of gear, mostly used Tascam gear off Ebay, and have filled my home-studio with about every choice piece of Tascam gear I could have imagined. At a certain point, my gear acquisition went beyond the "practical use" aims, and became a "collection" of gear, all of which still serves a practical recording use in the studio, not to mention the 17 guitars, 4 basses, piano, & tons of mics & accessories I've accumulated over the last 20 years. Actually, most of my gear was acquired at a moderately "normal" pace, until about Y2000, when I started acquiring gear at an accellerated pace, & now the home-studio is jam-packed with great gear, the likes of which I could not have even dreamed about 20 years ago.
I've been hooked on home-recording for over 20 years, and it's been a lifetime of fun & pleasure. Music & home recording is just plain fun, and now I think recording serves as an important archival tool to document a musical & personal growth, set onto tape, & etched into history.