do you make music on Linux, and what's your favorite software to work with? and what do you miss the most from Linux music/audio software that exists on other platforms?
@cinap_lenrek fun fact, i first included BSD and plan9 in my post but then edited it out again to focus :D
@cinap_lenrek hehe yeah the tools matter a little bit to me :D if i constantly have to fight the thing, i'm not making music
@mntmn I feel like tagging @aeva here (in case you don’t follow each other?) since I know she works on both OSes… and writes her own stuff, too.
I haven’t done anything more serious than just having ‘play sessions’, rather than “let’s make a song!” sessions so my insight probably isn’t as valuable as others, but I like Ardour as much as I think I can get comfortable with any DAW and I enjoy using Helm and https://zynaddsubfx.sourceforge.io/ for various software synth stuff (they have a plugin you can).
I enjoyed playing around with the Bitwig Studio demo but I don’t know how good it is for stuff. But the synth options were pretty awesome and easy to use for someone who isn’t overly familiar with a lot of the standard types of levers to manipulate, so to speak
@aud @mntmn my favorite Linux music software is #mollytime, but I'm biased because I wrote it.
Rosegarden handles realtime playback completely wrong, but it is ok as a MIDI editor. I've been using Tenacity for simple edits of recordings and to converting WAVs to other formats.
I don't really use Windows for music (beyond keeping the windows version of mollytime more or less at parity), and I've never used Macos for music.
@mntmn i used to use FL Studio on Windows but I have yet to find a good alternative on Linux. It does not really matter though since I never made music seriously, just messing around as a hobby.
@mntmn mixxx is fun! No experience with other dj software
@aud @mntmn the RPI-400 i have on hand only has 4 GB, which makes the device very infuriating to use for normal tasks like "opening websites in firefox", so I haven't tried to use it for much of anything else. I tried to use it to tide me over when my laptop broke a while back, and it was so bad I ended up buying a steamdeck instead. In theory 4 GB should be significantly more than enough to actually run mollytime. I don't remember what the clock speed is on the device.
@mntmn I used Bitwig on Linux a few times. It’s not open-source and a lot of people take issue with that, but it’s a fine piece of software
@fabio yeah, i had a license once, a long time ago, but unfortunately they didn't make an arm64 linux version
@mntmn
Yep!
I've enjoyed LMMS the most.
I miss the ease of using Logic on macosx from 10+ years ago
@mntmn @aud This is where the source currently lives https://github.com/Aeva/mollytime "excelsior" is the main branch. README.md walks through the basic installation instructions, BUILD.md documents everything necessary to build it and what all the mollybuild.py wraps (as well as what dependencies you may need to install yourself), and BUILD-linux.md contains some additional notes. iirc most of the dependencies are automatically cloned from upstream repositories by mollybuild.py
@mntmn @aud if you try it out let me know!
also if you get it to run, there's a hoard of patches in the (poorly curated) examples folder. "drums4.beep" is my current goto for confirming if basic functionality is working. "breath_of_the_world.beep", "tape_loop.beep", "central_dynamo.beep" are probably the main highlights for hearing something pleasant, and in general it is a good idea to keep your volume down low when opening an unfamiliar patch.
@mntmn @aud the patches in examples/midi are all midi instruments. I usually use aplaymidi to feed midi streams into them or use a midi controller. molytime has 32 lanes of polyphony for midi patches by default which makes them a lot more expensive. starting mollytime with `-p 16` will set it to use 16 lanes instead, etc. Generally you want to see the LOAD indicator run below 50% for midi patches, below 20% is better.
@mntmn @aud also as a stopgap for not having proper documentation, this video walks through the basics of how to write and manipulate patches https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7gWxtttdr0s
@mntmn I do a lot of FL Studio v12 via Wine but for goofing around I enjoy SunVox (which has a bunch of ports).
@ruben@friendship.quest @ruben Oh weird. Are you using an external mixer/sound card?
@mntmn #ardour and #linuxshowplayer are my favorite and most used audio tools
@mntmn Favourite native softwares: Musescore & Reaper. What I really-really miss: native support for professional software instruments and toolkits like Komplete kontakt or Viena Ensemble Pro or iZotope, etc...
@mntmn I don't think I could pick "one" favourite software, as many are involved in my workflow: @ardour is the cornerstone, but I also use LSP plugins, Neural Amp Modeler and TuxGuitar a lot 🎸
I do miss the ability to use nice modern gear that require PC software, as vendors rarely offer 🐧 versions. This limits my options, but OTOH I spend more time playing rather than endlessly tweaking presets 😉
https://neuralampmodeler.com
https://lsp-plug.in
https://tuxguitar.app
https://dimehead.de
@mntmn xwax vinyl control (like serato/traktor), it's pretty neat.