Thanks tkr, what kind of music do you play/record??
I play/record Christian rock; I play drums, guitar, can sorta play bass and I'm learning keyboards, but don't sing (absolutely refuse to sing

)and I unfortunately am not in a band anymore (artistic differences between me and the singer/guitar player) so I'm not recording any bands unfortunately.

So untill I get a band going it's pretty much being used as a scratch pad for writing music and stuff (got lotsa music, but no lyrics and no one to sing the lyrics). But I'm doing some stuff for a lady at my church who has written several songs and one of the guys here (Tubedude) wants me to send him some stuff to mix, so I'm gonna try to get someone from my youth group to sing for it.

And there aren't really alot of other bands around here any more, they all pretty much broke up (at least the ones I've heard of anyway), but hopefully I can get some more stuff going here because I think I'm starting to like all this recording stuff just as much as actually making the music.
I was just curious because I like electronic alot. It seems like cakewalk is almost all about MIDI and I wonder if I should just do like you and just use it for Audio? It sure would be nice to record audio with all those tracks!
If you like electronic music, then why would you want to record just audio??

But if that's what you want to do then you can do that, because for my friend that I'm doing the keyboard recording for, I just run out of the audio (speaker) outs on the keyboard and record it as audio and it sounds great. So you can record you keyboards and do your "electronic music" without having to learn all that confusing MIDI yet, and as you gain more knowledge in recording you can then try to tackle it (if you want to).
Thanks for the advice, keep those papers going, and try not to miss the porch next time!
Ooops sorry, was that your house?.....and don't worry about it, I'll pay for the windows.
-tkr