
I had too, a traumatic beginning, cos there was no body to explain me anything… Got the system through the post, from London going to my before place, Glasgow, and that’s it. I felt as lost as an ant in the Madison Square!

I didn’t know how to connect things together. I was a musician and a composer of those who writes everything in music papers. What the hell was I doing in front of a Virtual Studio? I felt rather desperate, particularly when I had to compose and finish a work, which was my first one to be published about a year after. It took me about 15 days to get all the cables, a little mixer, understand all the virtual and analogue connections, learn the new and incredible powerful Cubase 3.7 at that time, and all the other threatening topics like mixing and mastering… Everything was just too much information and I was getting crazy. My knowledge was too basic to do any serious work, I just understood how things would work together, that’s it…
Fortunately, the coming up of a fantastic magazine, called Computer Music, came to live and there I’ve learned lots of things meanwhile Planet Z was born… They gave people about 30 web addresses, among them Harmony Central, from which I didn’t know anything. Well, then I started to read everything about computers, hardware, software, etc. Just after a year I can say, I’ve learned to use Pulsar, Cubase and some basic sound editing, mixing and mastering…
I feel much comfortable now after almost 5 years of using Pulsar and Cubase, but I’m just a little child on it… There is soooooo much you can do. This is what never stops surprising me about Pulsar, it’s incredible ingenious and endless, inventive power of experimentation…
I have to thank of course, like you to all of these people who answered me so kindly when I felt so lost… Cheers…
