LinuxMusic

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Community for music producers who use linux, whether you are using lmms/ardour/bitwig or using wine for ableton/flstudio, to discuss and ask questions

feel free to post your new music and setups, too!

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Read Here First (lemmy.world)
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by cm0002@lemmy.world to c/linuxmusic@programming.dev
 
 

This is a living post that will be updated over time

Feel free to make suggestions in the comments

open-source DAWs

  • Ardour – multitrack audio/MIDI recording, editing, and mixing DAW
  • LMMS – pattern-based DAW with built-in synths; great for beats/electronic
  • Qtractor – lightweight JACK/PipeWire-friendly audio/MIDI sequencer
  • Bespoke Synth – modular DAW/synth environment

livecoding

  • Sonic Pi – Ruby-based live-coding synth with precise timing
  • SuperCollider – synthesis server + language for algorithmic music/DSP
  • TidalCycles – pattern-focused live-coding DSL (commonly with SuperDirt)

tools

  • Carla – plugin host/patchbay and LV2/VST bridging
  • JACK – low-latency audio/MIDI routing between apps and devices
  • PipeWire – modern low-latency audio graph integrating JACK/PulseAudio workflows
  • WineASIO – ASIO driver for Wine to run Windows DAWs/plugins with low latency

patchbay / routing

  • qpwgraph – PipeWire patchbay
  • helvum – simple GTK patchbay
  • qjackctl – JACK control/patchbay (still handy on PipeWire)

session management

system-wide FX

plugin bundles (LV2/VST)

synths & instruments

samplers, drums & loopers

guitar & amp modeling

recording / editing / analysis

MIDI & control

bridging windows plugins

  • yabridge – run Windows VST2/3 on Linux via Wine
  • LinVst – alternative bridge

DJ / playback / collaboration

notation

handy CLI libs

  • SoX – swiss-army audio tool
  • Rubber Band – time-stretch/pitch-shift library & CLI

OC text by @incentive@lemmy.ml

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When talking about recording studios, you can’t avoid two operating systems. One of them comes preinstalled on most PCs and laptops, you can buy the hardware for a few euros at any grocery store, and its name is basically synonymous with “PC”: Windows. The other comes from Apple, is tied to comparatively expensive hardware, and is built on a Unix-like kernel. Usually, producers start out on a Windows PC, then professionalize at some point and switch to Mac. The reason is pretty simple: Mac is stable and doesn’t force updates on you while you’re rendering your 64-track audio.

Mainly because of its widespread use, Windows is the quasi-standard in every smaller studio — and definitely among bedroom producers. But let’s be honest: Is Windows even up to date for studio work anymore?

I used Linux in the studio for many years. Now, as part of becoming more professional as a musician, I had to switch back to Windows. Not because my DAW isn’t available for Linux, but because I rely on plugins that simply don’t work on Linux, even with Wine. This text is a call to Native Instruments, Orchestral Tools, Musio, and all the other brilliant developers who make plugins for Mac and Windows — but neglect Linux.

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