Audio production distro/programs recommendation

Forum: LinuxTotal Replies: 9
Author Content
techiem2

May 12, 2008
2:46 PM
Ok, so my sis has a Vista laptop (Dell 1721 as I recall), and it getting frustrated with Vista (what else is new).
She's probably going to have me put XP on it, and I told her I will put Linux on as well when I do.

Along with her normal activities (writing, publisher, etc), she like to do some music composition and recording from her midi keyboard (I got her a midi-usb box for her laptop).

So I'm wondering, what apps are good and fairly easy to use for composition via midi and via manual editting?

What distros should I look at that have those programs available easily?

I have started installing a bunch of stuff on my laptop that I need to try, but it might be better to set her up with a distro with such things easily installed and automatically configured (like things that need Jack...).

Any suggestions from the audio experts out there?
Sander_Marechal

May 13, 2008
12:58 AM
Have a look at Audacious and Jokosher: [HYPERLINK@www.jokosher.org]
sleepy

May 13, 2008
6:37 AM
Hi techiem2,

There is a huge variety of quality Linux audio apps available. A first port of call would probably be [HYPERLINK@linux-sound.org] with sections devoted to different categories of software including midi software and even distros specialised for audio work. There is also [HYPERLINK@news.softpedia.com] which is a summary of the major audio distros.

I'm not a musician, so I don't play with midi, but I believe Rosegarden is one of the better known options. Ardour is a fantastic digital audio workstation, but it doesn't (yet) do midi sequencing. It is, however, under rapid development.

In the audio area, my main interest has been in recording and re-mastering old vinyl. For this, I have used at different times Ardour + Jack; Audacity + LADSPA plugins; Rezound; and GWC - Gnome Wave Cleaner. All of these should be found in standard repositories for most major distros. I found for my purposes that it all performed adequately without moving to custom kernels etc. QJackCtl reports a latency of 46.4 msecs on a standard Ubuntu 7.10 install. A 'multimedia' kernel should do better, if it matters.

The one thing I did invest in was a decent sound card - in my case an M-Audio Audiophile 2496 (which I'm disappointed to say is not recognised and set up properly by Ubuntu 8.04 - a pulse problem it seems, as Kubuntu recognises it). For a laptop, an quality USB external sound card from a manufacturer such as M-Audio might be useful. I believe some people prefer having the DAC outside of the computer, even if it is a desktop machine, to isolate it from sources of interference. I have recently been purchasing sound equipment for work to be used with laptops for multimedia presentations, and I have been told that all laptops, except Apple, interestingly, have power supplies that tend to induce ground loop hum into the audio circuit. We are investing in cheap hum eliminators.

I hope this is of some help. I'd be interested in finding out how you/she get on with using Linux for audio applications.
nicsmr

May 13, 2008
10:09 AM
Sleepy,

Can you please let me know the make/model, supplier and approximate cost of the hum eliminators?

I am using a laptop for music for dance performances but am getting an annoying hum when the music is not playing.

Thanks
Nick
techiem2

May 13, 2008
12:40 PM
Thanks. I'll look around at all that.
My basic audio experience in linux has been using audacity to record and split tapes now and then.
sleepy

May 16, 2008
5:09 AM
Hi nicsmr,

Sorry about the delay - I needed to check the details on the order. The hum eliminator we have had recommended is from Hosa, a company known for its audio cables & accessories. I believe its this model: [HYPERLINK@www.binarydesigns.com.au] We haven't received them yet, so I can't tell you how well they work. They retail for AUD$139.

Sleepy
nicsmr

May 16, 2008
10:08 AM
Thanks Sleepy,

I'll look into it.

Nick
wjl

May 16, 2008
11:15 AM
techiem,

regarding distros, you could give 64Studio a try - I think it's more or less Debian for musicians. Your laptop has to support 64 Bits of course, but other than that...

Oh, and I think Ubuntu Studio more or less tries to do the same.

HTH,
Wolfgang
dinotrac

May 17, 2008
2:24 AM
I should mention that Renoise is also available for Linux. Very popular Tracker with some MIDI capabilities. Linux version is fairly recent addition to the family.
helios

May 17, 2008
2:06 PM
Concerning that hum...

I no longer have an audio card that offers the mixer checkmark that produces that sound but I know which you are talking about. Go into your mixer settings kmix/switcher/? I believe the one you are looking to uncheckmark starts with an "E". It hassled me to no end until I stumbled around and found the culprit. I may not be correct here because if I remember right, the sound was a persistent and annoying hiss rather than a hum...you might also turn down the volume on any external mic you have...it could be as simple as that.

h

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