If you don't need a standard looking midi sequencer, I would strongly
recommend seq24 (recently updated and mentioned on this list).
Otherwise, qtractor should do the job. I would have said that
rosegarden or muse would be overkill (and might not run that well),
but it might be worth you looking at those too..
I think all of those are available in the Ubuntu repositories. They
may not be the latest versions although they should be perfectly
usable - you might need to "roll your own" for the latest features.
James
On Tue, Dec 2, 2008 at 5:54 AM, Francis Graves <fgraves525(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hello -- this is my first post so I hope I am not
starting out asking the
wrong types of questions. I recently purchased a ASUS 900 with a 16 GB SSD.
As many people do, I also installed the special Ubuntu Eee netbook version.
Does a simple multitrack MIDI sequencer exist in binary form that will
install easily using the ASUS series Net Books?
Piano roll editing is sufficient. I need about 480 ppq. I am trying to
reduce my dependence on Windows and except for the audio software I am
accomplishing this with this $299 US computer.
I am an experienced user of music software and prefer recording my piano
tracks in MIDI as although I am a fair player I am not perfect and software
to go in a visually fix timing or note errors would be very helpful.
I naturally am interested in other types of audio software and have been
researching the variety that exists but for some reason a cheap and dirty
MIDI sequencer does not jump out at me.
Thanks for your help.
Frank Graves
Spring, TX
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