Sysop: | Amessyroom |
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Lupine Furmen wrote to Nightfox <=-
Haven't really looked since I'm more of a broadcast DJ than a recording DJ, but do use Audacity on my windows machine to make intros and
bumpers.
i'm in the same boat, I've used Audacity for recording interviews for broadcast, and ue it for preparing podcasts, but I don't > do any multitrack studio recording.
I asked my SecAdmin if he had any suggestions, and he recommended LLMS: https://lmms.io/
Might want to give it a look see.
Lith wrote to Vk3jed <=-
Audacity is nice. It's good to use to clean up recordings and such..
Hi all,
I have considered migrating to Linux at some point in the future. I'm curious what (if any) multi-track music recording software anyone likes to use for Linux? Is Linux at all considered a serious platform for music recording? It seems like Linux keeps getting more mature all the time, with improved Linux distros and software becoming available. Honestly I don't do much recording, and it's one of those things that I keep thinking of doing more but haven't gotten around to it..
For Windows, my favorite multi-track recording software is Mixcraft. OS X has Garage Band, which I think is fairly good too. I know Audacity is available on
all 3 platforms, and although it's free, I'm not sure it's as full-featured as
Mixcraft or Garage Band.
I did a quick search for Linux multi-track recording software, and one of the first links was Ardour:
https://ardour.org/
From the looks of it, it looks like it might be fairly good, with a UI similar
to Mixcraft/Garage Band.
Nightfox
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¡ Synchronet ¡ Digital Distortion: digitaldistortionbbs.com
https://ardour.org/
From the looks of it, it looks like it might be fairly good, with a UI
similar to Mixcraft/Garage Band.
ardour rocks.