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What is your software/hardware set up?

I'm currently running Ubuntu, but the way things are going with snap et Al I'm looking to move to something else soon.

My software setup has barely changed in a long time. Ardour is the core of all my production, I use qjackctl for handling Jack, Hydrogen for drums and then occasionally throw in a bit of Renoise or Bitwig for extra synth/sampler needs. I like to keep it simple and this really works for me.

What do you use?

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[-] ebauche@waveform.social 2 points 1 year ago

It seems like snap is a bit of a disaster. I have a VM running Ubuntu for testing some things and ended up completely removing snap it was taking up so much space.

[-] jaykstah@waveform.social 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've been running on Arch for the past few years and using PipeWire with the relevant drop in packages for the last year or so to handle audio. Wouldn't necessarily recommend Arch for someone mainly focused on doing production work as brand new PipeWire releases sometimes cause issues.

  • Ardour for working on music / audio editing

  • qpwgraph for routing (i used to use qjackctl but qpwgraph is built with PipeWire in mind and does what i need + can save and load routing )

  • carla-rack for mic processing (some noise reduction, compressor, eq for voice chat / OBS recording fed into a virtual mic source)

  • the pro-audio package group on Arch provides a bunch of tools and plugins conveniently. I just keep all of them installed and find something new to try out here and there. You can see what packages are part of that group for inspiration and find the packages for whatever distro you wanna use

  • i make the most use of x42, LSP, and Calf plugins for day to day stuff

Other than that just some bash scripts that run pactl commands to create the virtual sinks and sources I typically use on startup, then when qpwgraph is started it will load my saved routing to those sources

[-] PixelPassport@chat.maiion.com 2 points 1 year ago

I've been using Pop!_OS for a while and have found it to be really stable. It's based on Ubuntu but without snap or a lot of other Ubuntu crap and it plays great with Nvidia cards.

I have used Ardour on it with Yabridge to convert VSTs and had pretty good results.

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 2 points 1 year ago

Nice I haven't used Yabridge as I don't really have any VSTs - any you would recommend?

[-] PixelPassport@chat.maiion.com 1 points 1 year ago

I can't think of any specifics, it's been a while since messing around with it. I used to just search for free ones and try them out. This post has inspired me to pull out the MIDI and get back into it though, so thanks!

[-] radswid@feddit.de 1 points 1 year ago

I use Arch btw, was recording and mixing in Ardour but since I discovered how great Reaper is concerning MIDI workflow I'm going to stick with Reaper.

[-] mrufrufin@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Debian testing with PipeWire for audio (and qpwgraph for routing). I really don't do anything remotely complicated recording-wise so my usual setup is Pure Data (usually with some sort of instrument input from my Fireface UCX) or SuperCollider (usually with TidalCycles for live coding) stereo outputs into Audacity where I just do basic normalization and compression. Was thinking of maybe getting into using a tracker for more "fixed" composition and I downloaded MilkyTracker (or maybe now that I think about it mb I could look into using LMMS more) but haven't toyed around with that too much yet.

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 1 points 1 year ago

It's not FOSS but renoise is an amazing tracker. Really wish they'd open source it and use the Ardour model, but can't complain. I pay £60 ten years ago and I still get updates free

I run Manjaro. Installed it in 2018 and stuck with it. I use Reaper for mixing and mastering. Production and recording away from the computer.

How is Ardour for mixing and mastering?? Can you compare it to Reaper?

[-] christophski@feddit.uk 2 points 1 year ago

I love ardour for audio work. Unfortunately I can't compare to reaper. I came from Protocols originally and could never have gone back. I used Logic for a while at university but always found myself coming back to ardour. I felt like it's work flow just moulded so we'll to mine

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this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2023
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Linux Audio

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Using linux for creating music.

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