On Thu, Feb 7, 2013 at 5:49 PM, Nils Gey <ich@nilsgey.de> wrote:


Needles to say, that does say a lot about the character of those persons. Their music sounds exactly the same: from low quality down to simple crap. "Learning how to use an instrument, even a virtual one? Learn how music works? Bah! I do it all from the gut.. bla bla bla".

Learn your tools and instruments. If you don't want a tool, use another one. If that means not using Linux Audio at all, so be it.

Nils


I would not necessarily agree with this.

There is a difference between having a learning curve (all Windows software, in fact, ANY software has a learning curve) and having a plain inconvenient interface or lack of basic functionality.
If you have an example of something being done in a way that has a smaller learning curve and a more pleasant workflow, with less mouse clicks, more reliable results, more functionality, it is no wonder people would want that.

Also, I cannot agree at all that a tool that is convenient to use is a tool with which you can only produce "from low quality down to simple crap". I am sorry, this is just plain incorrect.

What evidence there is that you can do better things musically with Qtractor than with Ableton? Is Linux better because to render a song on Ableton you just press a button and on Qtractor you have to channel midi to a separate DAW, render audio separately from midi and then resync them in a multi-channel sound editor? Does that make music better?

When you have trouble with the tools you use, you're gonna spend less time doing actual music. I myself spent a year producing almost nothing and learning to do things the Linux way, with my time divided between compiling stuff and then figuring out how can I get some basic things done, like render a looped soundtrack.

--
Louigi Verona
http://www.louigiverona.ru/