Today was a little bit and I made some research on software and applications for creating, composing, recording and management of audio, sound and music that were available for Linux.
I've been browsing some random collecting names and ideas.
I started by looking at the list of applications that brings my Ubuntu and I noticed MusE . MusE
According to that list is a MIDI sequencer / audio recording and editing capabilities. Another
museum here, but refers to a tool for streaming audio (streaming audio over the network in real time, to listen while it downloads).
can often get a quick idea of \u200b\u200bthe capabilities of a program to see a screenshot. Here are some of museum image1, image2 , imagen3 , imagen4 , imagen5 .
I have not tested this tool (or any other of those mentioned here, D), but I have not seen in the screenshots any window to introduce music to score, I'm afraid I can not. Following links
spent the Museum Ardour, which describes itself as a complete workstation digital audio. It seems fairly comprehensive and complicated.
Here's another screen: imagen1 .
It will take a few hours to get juice to it.
The next thing I found is Hydrogen , great rhythm programmer / music box. Here
a Linux Journal article which is a good introduction to this program. Hydrogen
Display: imagen1 .
For example, a guy says he can get results like this: You generate
- pace with Hydrogen and export it to WAV. Generate
- notes Noteedit and export them to WAV.
- I put the same tempo and mix it all with Audacity.
- QuickMix mixtures and then export it to mp3.
Then I found something called Jamin, which is an application for mastering JACK audio interface. In turn, JACK is an audio server to interface between applications synchronously and low latency. That is, to take the output of an audio program and send it to the input of another, and so on. So
posts, let the moment Jack and Jamin (which really applies filters and EQ JACK).
Another name I found is Qjackctl . Is defined as a simple application for controlling the JACK audio server on Linux. So we'll leave it for later too. Then came
Rosegarden, which amounts to a Cubase for Linux. Here some screen
: image1, image2 (this does have scores).
seems a good program, must be proven.
you notice that I mentioned earlier something called NoteEdit . MIDI editor is a pretty neat scores.
Here the reader, here NoteEdit: imagen1 .
Finally, also said something to mix things Audacity. It is an audio editor and recorder free (that gets you through the window of the office).
Some screens: image1, image2 .
Well, there are plenty of tools and little time to irlas looking. So if you who are reading this, you've used any of them, put a comment on the matter, which is more than welcome.
PS: if you Sergio, let yourself use the Encore, Noteworthy and pirated software and spend more to Linux! If Jose could do you.
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