Oh buddy. well there's some things to consider:
-don't just go for Pro Tools. If you are looking to impress clients, hen have Pro Tools. Otherwise, it is better to get Reaper or Studio One. Or Logic if you have an Apple. Pro Tools has great audio editing, but in the end a DAW is a DAW, and once you learn it's functions, no big difference. Unless you plan on recording 24 tracks live, don't worry about Pro Tools. It's only main benefit is hardware DSP-acceleration and name recognition. And if you want the DSP, just get another DAW with a high-end interface by RME or Lynx.
Apple vs. PC.
Meh. with Apple computers you have some great options (Logic DAW, Apogee interfaces) but I would say it boils down to how knowledgeable you are about computers, how willing you are to deal with the headaches a PC will give you, and how much money you have. If you want to drop $2000 on a computer alone, get an Apple. I use my PC for gaming, audio, and other stuff, so PC was the only real option. For a dedicated audio workstation, go with either an Apple or a Creative Station http://www.sweetwater.com/creation_station/" rel="nofollow - http://www.sweetwater.com/creation_station/
Interface
Inputs and functionality are what to consider here. If you ever want to record live drums with an interface, make sure it has at least 8 TRS/mic inputs. For MIDI and only 1 or 2 line inputs, get a Focusrite Scarlett or an Apogee Duet. Also consider USB or Firewire. Firewire is generally better for audio, but for what you're doing it may not matter.
Monitors
Be prepared to spend at least $500 total on monitors, but easily consider 800-1200. Not kidding. Mixing on cheap monitors will give you crap results, guaranteed. I highly recommend Yamaha HS-80Ms. They reveal the faults in your mixes amazingly. Also consider a set of Sony MDR cans to check mixes on. $99 for industry standard mix checking.
Software.
Most DAWs come bundled with functional plugins (EQ, compression, stereo field, etc). For pro level stuff of that nature, look into some cheaper McDSP packages. Of course, if you're on select DAWs, you can use VST plugins, which are also great. Waves plugins rule, but I've heard nasty things about activations and whatnot.
For a beginner, there is no better instrument suite than Native Instruments Komplete. $500-700, but it gets you the basics in EVERYTHING...synths, Studio Drummer, Organs, Guitar Rig (especially). Just saw trent Rezor using Guitar Rig on Dave Grohl's documentary. If that doesn't sell you....
Mics
I think you could accomplish a lot with a Shure SM 57 and a Rode NT-1A. The SM57 is the workhorse of audio, and you can use it on anything. The NT-1A is bright, but it covers well whatever the Shure doesn't. I'd use the 57 for live recorded distorted guitars, vocals, and drums. The NT-1A is good for acoustics and electrics, overheads on drums, and vocals. The only other thing you might need is a bass-capturing mic, but generally you'd want to direct input bass anyway through Guitar Rig ;)
That's basically what I have. I guess if you want the super cheap route: Build your own PC or Macbook on Craigslist, bucket full of 57s, Focusrite Scarlett interface, some cheap monitors (make sure frequency response is AT LEAST 40Hz-20kHz, or your mixes will sound bad), Reaper recording software, software might be tricky.
Audio is hard to do on a budget, just so you know, this is what I've spent at least:
-PC: at least $1200 -Pro Tools: $300 -Komplete: $500 -Monitors (Yamaha HS80M): $700 -Interface (M-Audio 2626): $300 -MIDI controller (Akai MPK88): $700 -Microphones: $350 at least
Not counting cabling, and I lowballed everything, that's $4050 in the past 3 years. Yeah, buddy.
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