I’m a professional instrumentalist and I’ve begun tinkering with digital audio production , hoping to start a side career composing digital music.

I’ve been working with Linux in general for over 15 years, and I’d like to stick with it, but I’m wondering if its actually viable in the professional world. It seems like most professionals are working with Ableton or other commercial software. I’m learning and working with Ardour, which seems great, but I wonder if I shouldn’t be investing my time in software that will be more useful longterm.

Anyone here have thoughts/experience with this?

  • @[email protected]
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    51 year ago

    Out of all the open source programs, Ardour definitely is the most capable one currently. LMMS fills a niche of chiptune, but seemed inferior in every other way when I tried it.

    If you are just concerned using linux but are open to closed source software, bitwig is the way to go probably. It’s pretty much made by the old Ableton team.

    If you want to make digital orchestral music specifically, Musescore 4 with musesounds is the best option, as they are the only program not limited by MIDI. And who knows, maybe Audacity will become more capable more quickly once they’re done with their refactoring.

    NB: You can absolutely develop a pipeline where you make certain things in one program and export what you did in another program.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      11 year ago

      I’ve got nothing against closed source, I just always like to see how far I can get with Foss software. Though the newest version of Ardour is no longer free if charge.

      Bitwig looks cool and also affordable! I’ll have to give it a closer look.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      Thanks. I’ll give Ardour a try. Don’t like how lmms bloats system with 32bit libraries