Acid lets you use a paint brush to paint in audio tracks, but with Ardour
supporting pitch and beat manipulations its starting to get some of the
features that acid uses, anyone with extra $$ should donate to Paul so he
can keep developing, ardour is one of the best all around linux apps. Muse
also has some similar features.
Le Vendredi 6 D�cembre 2002 22:42, vous avez �crit :
On Fri, Dec 06, 2002 at 09:12:19PM +0100,
Gerasimos Grammatikopoulos wrote:
Let's see if Ardour is up to it (at least
partially, it's not fair
comparing a "newborn" to well established stuff)
Well, it's also not intended as an ACID-workalike.
Ardour is aiming to be a full-featured DAW / hard disk recorder.
You can loop stuff on it, but that's not its reason for being.
It's also still pre-alpha, so using ardour is for the adventurous.
I'm feeling adventurous, just got it compiled and installed for the
first time in ages, so I'll be trying to lay down some tracks tonight.
BTW, i take acid for a innovation in the sense it allows to compose music
straight from audio.
Ardour is more a clone of Samplitude/Protools but it has already the
interessant feature that allow to snap the "clips" to a beat or measure.
In my mind a step toward the composition.
I have never used acid (well may be one time years ago) and i have been on
the sonicfoundry site to see some screenshots.
But well, it is not easy to understand much what acid can do that makes it so
specific.
Could someone say what are the obvious features of this paradigm, what make
it to be more than a samplitude like tool ?
May be some of them can be implemented in a linux DAW ?
Linium