On the software front, Ardour is definitely the most complete DAW.
www.ardour.org
I think it's in the repositories. Audacity is great for just editing short
sections of sound, or for a quick way to get ideas down, but Ardour is much
better for multitracking.
On 23/08/07, Matthew Larsen <[EMAIL P
oh yeah forgot about that :-). I have a Behringer 1202 (£60). Nice
little thingymabob.
Ps a good site to find this stuff is www.dolphinmusic.co.uk
On 23/08/07, Pete Stean <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On the mixing desk front, one of the little Behringer jobs with 4 XLR inputs
> would probably do
On the mixing desk front, one of the little Behringer jobs with 4 XLR
inputs would probably do you if you're looking for a cost-effective solution
- simple, straightforward features, easy to use etc :)
A Behringer Xenyx 1202 would probably suit unless you need more inputs or
you want to do more f
TBH From my experience professional recording on linux simply isnt
there yet (well, at reasonable prices anyway).
However some pointers:
Hardware wise I would most definately reccomend a professional
soundcard. Try the M-Audio 2496 for a cheap decent prof card (about
£60-70). Whatever card you ge
On 17/08/07, Mark Harrison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What I need advice on are:
>
> - Advice on what audio editing software I need (I'm coming from an Adobe
> Audition / CoolEdit) background, and the key features I need are
> FFT-based noise reduction, track volume normalisation, and in-line edi
Hi all,
For the last few years, I've been using a Tascam Portastudio to do live
recordings, then exporting the files down to the PC for editing.
It strikes me that technology's probably moved on sufficiently, that I
should just be carrying around a laptop.
I'd much prefer this to be an Ubuntu