>> I've got quite a few things that we've done with Ardour, but I don't
>> have a server with sufficient bandwidth to put them on for general
>> consumption.
>>
>> Anyone want to set up a central site for these pieces?
>
>Sure, I could. I have a server with ample bandwidth and a snazzy CMS.
>
>Can anyone think of a name for said repository/expo site?
>
>I could probably have it up by this weekend.
>
Ok, I can't help myself. I'm throwing in a song as well. This song is from a 10 song recording project I just finished, all origional stuff. CD is comming out in the very near future. All editing/mixing/mastering/FX done using a linux box and OSS. Enjoy.
http://students.jbu.edu/martinr/LAU_demo.ogg
Greetings,
I see that SuSE 9.2 Professional uses the 2.6.8 kernal. Since I've been
hearing so many warnings about 2.6 series and audio issues, I wanted to
ask anyone using SuSE 9.2 Professional what their experiences have been
with working with audio with this version. I know that SuSE 9.0 (the
version I currently have) is set up beautifully for doing serious audio
work. I would assume the SuSE team have put a lot of attention to
setting it up well for doing professional audio work, but I thought I
would ask before upgrading. Otherwise, I will wait for next version if
there's any issues to smooth out.
Please let me know your experiences with this.
Thanks,
Rocco
>>Ok, I can't help myself. I'm throwing in a song as well. This song is from a 10 song recording project I just finished, all origional stuff. CD is comming out in the very near future. All editing/mixing/mastering/FX done using a linux box and OSS. Enjoy.
>>
>>http://students.jbu.edu/martinr/LAU_demo.ogg
>>
>>
>Outstanding ! Excellent recording, good song, very engaging singer...
>loved the breakout near the end, made this gloomy Ohio morning a finer
>day... :)
>
>Can you tell us more about how you did this, what software, hardware, et
>cetera ?
>
>Best,
>
>dp
Ok, The recording part was done in a recital hall. (The noise floor from the ventalation system was awful) I used mics from a collection of very nice condenser mics, did a very small amount of adjusting things like eq, downward expansion, hormonic generator etc. before sending to ADAT tape. At that time I wasn't comfortable with recording directly to Ardour, it was still too buggy and I was afraid I might loose things, and be totally screwed. Ardour is getting to the point where I might use it to record directly onto harddrive in the future.
>From there on everthing was on the computer. I dumped to computer via ADAT connection on my RME9632 PAD. I edited things with Audacity. (For instance, on two songs the bass timing was off and I had to chop it up note by note, adjust the timings, and stich it all back together seamlessly. yuck.) I did some filtering of the room noise on tracks with Gnome Wave Cleaner, a very buggy program that works well when it works. >From there I mixed using Ardour, using various LADSPA plugins for inserts when needed, and mastered with Jamin.
BTW: I did the album art on Linux too. Mostly Gimp, but also a little bit of Inkscape and Scribus.
-Reuben
Does anyone know which algorithm this uses?
There are the chorus/phase algorithms. PSP's VST uses comb filters on
multiples of a settable frequency. Others use FFT oriented stuff.
hello,
Man, I really want to get realtime linux working on my 64 bit machine!
make error:
CHK include/linux/version.h CC arch/x86_64/kernel/asm-offsets.s
In file included from include/asm/timex.h:12,
from include/linux/timex.h:61,
from include/linux/sched.h:11,
from arch/x86_64/kernel/asm-offsets.c:7:
include/asm/vsyscall.h:55: error: conflicting types for \'xtime_lock\'
include/linux/time.h:83: error: previous declaration of \'xtime_lock\' was here
include/asm/vsyscall.h:55: error: conflicting types for \'xtime_lock\'
include/linux/time.h:83: error: previous declaration of \'xtime_lock\' was here
make[1]: *** [arch/x86_64/kernel/asm-offsets.s] Error 1
make: *** [arch/x86_64/kernel/asm-offsets.s] Error 2
My .config:
http://www.aproximation.org/application/kernel.config-2.6.10-rc2-mm1-RT-V0.…
My Machine:
http://www.aproximation.org/application/AMD64laptop.html
Thanks,
-thewade
On pre-existing mixes, I have tried various plugs available through XMMS. The
LADSPA equalizers might be useful though their UI needs better, more logical
design. Most of the others seem quite specialized, might be useful on
synthesizer tracks.
The one plugin that can sound quite nice is the included (non-LADSPA) stereo
enhancer. I have found no DX or VST freebee that works as well or as imply.
The "PSP stereo enhancer" is close but has more adjustments to mess up. Both
increase the level so the trim needs be lowered.
Has anyone come across other such plugins? Can (such as by using jack) XMMS be
used to apply its plugin and the result be saved in another .wav file?
This is a bit off topic, since, although pydance is an audio app of
sorts, my problem isn't with the audio, but there's enough expertise
here that someone might be able to help. I have tried both the
pydance mailing list and comp.os.linux.hardware, and haven't made any
progress.
I got a USB mat from Level6 to use with pydance, and it looks like the
system is recognizing it as a joystick, but I can't get it to read any
events. I checked it on a Windows 98 system, and it has no problem
seeing the button events, so I think the hardware is probably OK.
When I boot with the mat attached, I get:
hub 2-0:1.0: USB hub found
hub 2-0:1.0: 2 ports detected
usbcore: registered new driver hiddev
ieee1394: Initialized config rom entry `ip1394'
input: USB HID v1.00 Gamepad [Dance Dance ] on usb-0000:00:11.0-2
usbcore: registered new driver usbhid
drivers/usb/input/hid-core.c: v2.0:USB HID core driver
pydance says on startup:
1 joystick(s) found.
Joystick 0 initialized: 3 axes, 10 buttons.
Loaded input configuration.
But it registers everything I do when I dance as a miss.
When I run jstest, I get:
[~]# jstest /dev/js0
Joystick (Dance Dance ) has 3 axes and 10 buttons. Driver version is
2.1.0.
Testing ... (interrupt to exit)
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
Axes: 0: 0 1: 0 2: 0 Buttons: 0:off 1:off 2:off
3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off 7:off 8:off 9:off
[~]#
But nothing more happens when I step on the pad.
uname -a says:
Linux tuba 2.6.9 #2 SMP Tue Nov 9 12:07:52 EST 2004 i686 GNU/Linux
What else do I need to do?
--
Laura (mailto:lconrad@laymusic.org , http://www.laymusic.org/ )
(617) 661-8097 fax: (501) 641-5011
233 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02139
Hi,
these days I really was amazed, because while discussing the
new Virus TI in the Access mailing list, I was told that the
Virus TI will do audio over a 1.1 USB bus.
Is it really true that USB 1.1 can do audio, and if so, are
there any USB soundcards out there which one could recommend?
I did a search in the archives of this list, and found a
recommendation of Clemens Ladisch that the Edirol UA-30 is
working well.
Unfortunately, it seems that it is discontinued. So, are there
any further devices one of you uses successfully?
I ask because I have a Dell Inspiron notebook and the audio
connection is simply lousy; if there were any USB 1.1
soundcard which will work well on my Gentoo box, I guess I'd
immediately buy one!
I put some system specs below. Lets see what I'm looking for
in detail:
* Audio in and out, both stereo
* Mic in
* Headphones out (not needed necessarily)
* MIDI not necessarily required because I already use an
Edirol UM-1S
Furthermore, what would you like to recommend as plugs? What
are the (dis)advantages between cinch and 3.5mm plugs?
Thanks a lot for your thoughts,
ce
uname -a
Linux Grandevitesse 2.6.7-gentoo-r6 #5 SMP Sat Oct 9 23:31:33
CEST 2004 i686 Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 Mobile CPU 1.60GHz
GenuineIntel GNU/Linux
/proc/asound/version
Advanced Linux Sound Architecture Driver Version 1.0.4 (Mon
May 17 14:31:44 2004 UTC).
Compiled on Oct 9 2004 for kernel 2.6.7-gentoo-r6 (SMP).