A few things I would advise my younger self to do…

  1. Learn and read about songwriting. Either traditional verse/chorus methods or something more focused on Electronic Music, such as the Ableton book:

https://makingmusic.ableton.com/

  1. Don’t worry about acquiring gear, gear, and more gear. If I were to do it all over again, I would not load up my room with expensive hardware. Try writing that decent EP or album with only the A4, supplemented with free/cheap vst instruments and fx. Focus on the songs first. Get them 80-90% of the way finished. If you still feel you need more hardware to achieve a particular sound, then buy it. But changing out a Diva sound for a Juno 106 sound is certainly not going to make or break a song.

  2. Don’t wait for inspiration or a muse to show up. Set a timer for 1 hour each day and just dig in. Writing and finishing songs takes lots of practice and work, just like anything else really. For every 20 crap songs, you might have 1 good song. Eventually you’ll accumulate enough of those good songs to have a nice EP or album.

  3. Learn proper gain staging and mixing and mastering basics. Make templates so you won’t have to fight volume and gain staging so much later during a mixdown. This will help get your songs out faster and you wont procrastinate because you know it won’t be such a royal pain to mix the song you’ve started. When you begin writing a song you’ll be confident your DAW and environment will be set up properly to record any audio.

I suggest Tarekith’s guides for cutting through the BS. It’s all most will ever need to release decent tracks on SoundCloud or Bandcamp.

  1. Keep things as simple as possible. Always ask yourself - do I really need this? - before adding new gear. Do I want to be a synth museum or a songwriter? Etc. Align your actions with your stated goals.