What piece of equipment or software is the hub of your home
studio? Is it portable? Why did you choose it?
I guess my DAW is at the hub because I have a roving commission rather than
a studio. What I mean by that is that I have no dedicated space. I live in a small two bedroom house set within a block of flats so I utilize every nook and cranny that I can. I use the kids' bedroom for drums, congas, tablas, bongos and any other percussion, I actually use it for everything else, stringed instruments, brass, woodwinds, vocals, electrics and acoustics. I use my wife & I's bedroom for bass, the front room for anything I can play from the keyboard or guitar/mandolin, I have an isocab {probably more of an isolation unit to keep noise from freaking out the neighbours} that I built for
my combo amps in one of the kitchen cupboards, I use the bathroom sometimes for vocals or guitar but it has a very bright sound so I'm mindful of that.
But you get the picture.
Because of the way I record my DAW has to be the hub of
the studio. It's not so much that the DAW is portable {it is} as much as
the studio itself is ! The first producer I ever met said to me "a studio is just a room" and while there is obviously more to it than that, in my head as a hobbyist, I think of any space as one that can be utilized.
My DAW is an Akai DPS12
and I chose it because for me it represented the perfect halfway house between the cassette based portastudio that I'd outgrown after 17 years and the computer recording set up with it's bells and whistles as I imagined it to be based on what I'd read. But I wanted both in one box. I specifically settled on the Akai because, along with the Fostex VF160, it was the only DAW that I came across after months of research that had varispeeding as one of it's features and varispeeding is crucial to me, particularly for vocal textures.