I'm thinking that your Windows power and performance settings are probably more relevant to audio applications than the BIOS settings.
As a rule I generally disable any unused onboard devices in the BIOS such as ethernet network adapters, onboard audio, etc., so they are not detected by Windows. If Windows sees them it will load a driver and enable them. I do this to minimize unnecessary resource usage.
As for the rest of the BIOS, I usually take most of the defaults. Anything related to overclocking gets skipped. I usually disable anything related to fast boot (using normal boot).
As long as the devices you need are detected and the system can boot without errors, the Windows OS is pretty much plug and play with the hardware. There are many discussions available for optimizing Windows for audio applications.