by Wait and See on 23 Jun 2007 10:12
I think I saw an interview somewhere with Stew where he talked about how he had a Fairlight and Sting had a Synclavier, and they used to kind of compete with each other on them. There's probably some of both on the Police albums. I think all of Stewart's scores for "The Equalizer" were done on the Fairlight. Those are both ancient, obsolete synths now. They were ridiculously expensive.
As for the video game music, I don't know if there is info posted anywhere on what programs or virtual instruments Stew uses these days when he works on that kind of stuff. I'm sure he could tell you if he happens to read this. I think he uses Digital Performer a lot to compose, and then Pro Tools.
Looking at Garageband (never used it before) it seems your options are pretty limited. If you find you really get into it, I would recommend investing in a more full-featured sequencer instead of spending money on the expansion packs for Garageband.
EDIT - Just read the RS interview, and here you go:
"The studio was booked for three weeks," Summers recalls grimly. "If Stewart hadn't fallen from his bloody horse, we would have jammed and out of that may have come something new. Instead, we had a Synclavier and a Fairlight" - two sampling keyboards - "and a big fight over which was better. I played my guitar part on the first night [on a remake of the 1981 hit 'Don't Stand So Close To Me']. The other twenty days was those two arguing about the two machines." Sting's curt assessment of the fiasco: "It was too early."