Siduction Forum
Siduction Forum => Free Speech => Topic started by: 10toe on 2013/12/24, 15:44:00
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Hi everybody,
I'd like to show you a song of my band:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQu9V-58j1A (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQu9V-58j1A)
For many production steps for our recordings we use SIDUCTION as our system. In particular that is Midi-Recording, pre-Mixing, single-Recordings and Mastering.
Merely for the post-Mixing we changed to Mac, but only because of hardware reasons (there were hardware related noisy cracklings in our songs that we could not fix nor locate).
So long! I wish a merry Christmas to all the siduction users and the whole team! :-)
Hans
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Congratulations on your demo!
Lots of people use Linux for mixdown successfully. You may need to just adjust a couple of settings such as changing CPU scheduler to performance, managing IRQs, or setting more latency in JACK (you are using JACK, right?).
A useful guide is http://openavproductions.com/real-time-latency-tuning/ (http://openavproductions.com/real-time-latency-tuning/)
and help is always at Linux Audio Users mailing list.
I have recently acquired Harrison Mixbus and set it up on Linux BBQ "Rocks" beta. I am very impressed with its functionality and performance.
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Yes, very nice, don't forget about
http://linuxmusicians.com/
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Thanks a lot, guys.
That's what I use to make and record music:
- Ardour3 (awsome DAW, audio and midi)
- Harrison Mixbus (DAW build on Ardour2, with a fantastic sound and feeling of an analog mixing console)
- Muse (Midi-Sequencer - the only one that I found, that can handle drag and drop with midi-Files)
- vsthost (a Windows-simulation (together with wine) that can handle a lot of proprietary audio-plugins, such as Addictive Drums, etc.)
- jamin (a mastering Analyzer, EQ and Compressor)
- audacity (the swiss knife for managing different audio types, bitrates, etc)
And all them bound together with the fantastic jack sound-server! I love the audio-workflow on linux!
And they all do not need many hardware ressources. As I have the direct comparison with mac, I would say it's the half of RAM needed.
But the point, why we had to try other systems was - as I mentioned - a horrible sound on quiet parts, something that sounded like a very fast clock and screeched when moving the mouse - perhaps the graphic card. We changed a lot of hardware but could not fix it. Well, I toyed with the idea of installing siduction on this mac-Desktop computer... ;-)