On Thu, 02 Jul 2015 11:14:45 +0200
Lorenzo Sutton <
lorenzofsutton@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> On 01/07/2015 19:11, Paul Davis wrote:
> > Some people it more convenient to have instruments as plugins inside a
> > DAW rather than external applications. That's all that is being
> > discussed.
> >
>
> I think that that stems from the need/wish to be able to easily recall a
> 'full setup' for a piece. Which I know probably leads to 'session
> management' discussions.
>
> Essentially I think that if people were able to one-click load DAW +
> Sequencer + (their instrument setup) regardless of the fact it is a
> single application or not, that need would be fulfilled.
> The advantage of the non-single-application approach is obviously
> modularity as well as a certain degree of portability.
>
> Personally the does-it-all-daw-sequencer-whatnot paradigm which got so
> popular at beginning of 2000s was one of the aspects which drew me to
> Linux where I could have a sequencer which was a sequencer, a DAW which
> was a DAW, etc. and 'cable' up everything through JACK
>
> My two cents.
> Lorenzo.
Following on from that, I find the (short) ritual I have when firing up seems
to settle me into the right frame of mind for creative work.
I hit the 'big switch' and stuff sequentially powers up. Once the desktop is
there (qjackctl set and running) I click on an icon to pull up Yoshimi, which
auto-connects main L&R audio mains. I click on another icon for Rosegarden,
which is configured to find Yoshimi and the hardware synths. It will also find
Hydrogen and Qsynth if they are running, but I don't use those very often.
This could be further automated of course, but I like it that way.
--
Will J Godfrey
http://www.musically.me.ukSay you have a poem and I have a tune.
Exchange them and we can both have a poem, a tune, and a song.
Am in the same mood, short routines that heat your mind to creativity,
nice to read you're not alone sometimes!!
Fred (who may have some ~poems~ but less tunes)