I have used Mint in the past for audio (as well as other things).  Although I am not currently using it I did quite like it at the time.

For editing, sequencing, drum programming and the like in-the-box I think you will fine.  JACK, Ardour, Luppp and Hydrogen worked fine for me when I was on Mint, so far as I remember. 

But you also say "recording."  If that means serious overdubbing or anything else where monitoring and minimal latency are a really big deal you may want a distribution that is specifically set up for low latency.  My computer music does not involve this so I can not be more specific.  I only know latency is critical in some recording situations.  "Desktop" distributions like Mint are not configured with this in mind.  

If you need super-low latency and want to use Mint it may take extra tweaking.  Again, I do not know the details.  If you want low latency pre-configured you might consider an audio-specific distribution. 

On the other hand, if you are like me and your work is not effected by the round-trip time out of the box and back in, go with Mint.  It is a very pretty, easy to install, nicely packaged, general-purpose, DEB-based desktop distribution that supports all the best desktop environments.  At least, it was three years ago, which is probably the last time I used it.

Neil


Sent from ProtonMail, encrypted email based in Switzerland.


‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Friday, February 15, 2019 1:22 AM, Alf Haakon Pietruszka Lund <alf@mellomrommet.no> wrote:

Hello all,
I'm considering to test Linux mint for my 'sound machine' - a normal laptop that's used for modest recording and editing of sounds and music, as well as miscellaneous office work.
Anyone here try that before? Any pitfalls to avoid?
Regards, Alf