The Linux #DAW website is exactly the kind of #LinuxAudio#MusicProduction resource I've been looking for - developed, as I understand, by @amadeus. The reputation of #Linux as a viable #music production OS is rapidly changing, thanks in part to excellent sites like this. Not to mention, of course, all the great software listed therein. https://linuxdaw.org/
You'd have been pretty hard-pressed to do something like this even five years ago, but a few companies have stepped up to the plate to give us some very nice-sounding free products.
In this instance I take my hat off to the following: #Soniccouture, #FractureSounds, #StrezovSampling and #NativeInstruments.
All of these products run in the free Kontakt player, so your only price of admission is that of your computer, chosen #DAW and if required, keyboard to play the plug-ins with.
Hey #musician friends! My kiddo is getting back into #music production and I was curious if y’all had any #DAW suggestions for iPad. He has a Juno DS and wants to connect it to something to help him organize his projects well. iMPC Pro 2 looked kinda neat?
Is there by any chance a piece of #Music software I could put on a #RaspberryPi that lets me:
Connect a #Midi keyboard and use as an electric piano;
Do simple sequencing and playback - not a full #DAW but just let me record and edit a piano sequence; then add another voice, or let me play live over that sequence.
As a bonus, possibly let me record a live track, but that's not really needed.
44100 Hz or 48000 Hz for #musicproduction?
Personally I usually go with 48000 Hz because it somehow feels more "natural" to me than 44100 Hz (as half of 96000 Hz or a quarter of 192000 Hz). Made my life easier a few times when I wanted to #compose#music for #movies too. #daw#linuxaudio