Free and open-source software I use for music production

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 530

  • @Mister333
    @Mister333 Před 5 lety +55

    Can you recommend some free audio plugins in linux for orchestral compositions? Cause I LOVE Manjaro Linux but I don't want to change OS everytime just for composing some music or create a Windows VM just because it's easier to find free VST on windows for that.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety +25

      --- UPDATE 20202-02-12:
      Virtual Playing Orchestra has serious licensing issues and should not be used in it's current state.
      AFAIK Titanic soundfont's source material licensing is also unclear and most likely violates copyright of 3rd parties.
      What is safe is listed here:
      hilbricht.net/foss-sampled-instruments.html
      --- ORIGINAL:
      On Manjaro (and other Arch-based distros) you can install a bunch of great free LV2 plug-ins encapsulating orchestral soundfonts:
      aur.archlinux.org/packages/fluidplug-git
      Also the Titanic Soundfont is a great GM soundfont, so in Ardour you can use the General MIDI Synth to use it:
      aur.archlinux.org/packages/soundfont-titanic
      Another resource is The Virtual Playing Orchestra:
      virtualplaying.com/virtual-playing-orchestra/
      It works in Carla, so to play with that in Ardour you need to use the Carla Rack plug-in - then you can drag'n'drop the SFZ files into it.
      I've just started playing with these, so I don't have a lot of experience yet.

    • @VorpalForceField
      @VorpalForceField Před 5 lety +3

      I have no experience with it, and this is not a plugin, but with reference to orchestral compositions rosegarden comes to mind.. FWIW.. www.rosegardenmusic.com/

    • @menfie
      @menfie Před 5 lety +2

      Carla is capable of running Windows VST plugins:
      czcams.com/video/PiaWozQ69eE/video.html

    • @andrzejwawer6241
      @andrzejwawer6241 Před 4 lety

      @@unfa00 GeneralMidiSynth in Ardour uses GeneralUser soundfont schristiancollins.com/generaluser.php it is very good

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety +4

      @@andrzejwawer6241 I've recently started using the Sfizz SFZ sampler - there's quite a few nice orchestral and other samples instruments available in that format in Public Domain.

  • @vladthemagnificent9052
    @vladthemagnificent9052 Před 5 lety +128

    Hey unfa, your faithful hater here. But excuse me, there is nothing to hate in this video, it is flawless I'd say, I watched it twice to check. You left me without work, so skrew you! Thaks.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety +40

      Sorry! I'll try to screw up *something* next time!

    • @EvensonFrancois
      @EvensonFrancois Před rokem +5

      i love this Exchange

  • @unfa00
    @unfa00  Před 5 lety +39

    A little correction:
    Some of the Ardour's Lua plug-ins are actually LV2 plug-ins, and if you installed Ardour from KX Studio Repositories, you can use them in other hosts as well! Though the GUIs look better in Ardour ;)

  • @andx4024
    @andx4024 Před 4 lety +8

    Argotlunar2 17:21
    Noise Repellent 17:51
    Tal Vocoder II 18:11
    Calf Vcoder 18:23
    Autotune 18:39
    Bitrot Repeat 19:08
    Bitrot Stoptape 19:22
    @ - Introduction
    @ - Operating System
    @ - Modular Workflow
    @ - Digital Audio Workstation
    @ - Plug-Ins
    @ - Synthesizer Plug-Ins
    @ - Sampler Plug-Ins
    @ - Effect Processor Plug-Ins
    @ - Delays
    @ - Reverbs
    @ - EQs and Filters
    @ - Pitchshifters
    @ - Distortion
    @ - Dynamics Processing
    @ - Other
    @ - Epilogue

  • @ShazamNC
    @ShazamNC Před 5 lety +17

    Hey unfa, greetings from Brazil!
    I've been following your channel for a while, and I'm just here to say thank you. You're a great person and a musician. I admire you and thank you for all the knowledge transmitted.

    • @ShazamNC
      @ShazamNC Před 5 lety +1

      @Antonio de Almeida unfa é fera demais!! feliz de ver outro br por aqui tb hahahaha

    • @henriquematias1986
      @henriquematias1986 Před 3 lety +1

      baixa o surge vst ( :
      plugin open source mais maneiro que ja usei, da um pau na maioria dos synths comerciais!

  • @TheCzarsoham
    @TheCzarsoham Před 5 lety +10

    This was exactly the kind of video I needed before I took the plunge into open source music software. I really appreciate it!

  • @RefriDeLagosta
    @RefriDeLagosta Před 5 lety +16

    YEEESS BOYO a fellow musician that is into gnu/linux

  • @pablocronin4229
    @pablocronin4229 Před 4 lety +2

    I love you man, your really amazing.You blew my mind. Everyone's running between Ableton, FL, protools, logic, r Cubase your working with ardour. You'r a fucking legend man. Respects

  • @vishnunath1524
    @vishnunath1524 Před 5 lety +4

    Calf studio gear is awesome. Can't believe they are giving away that thing for free.

    • @bmusic9817
      @bmusic9817 Před 5 lety +1

      ... and open source !

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety +2

      Oh yeah! Calf plug-ins are very important in my workflow as you can see :)

  • @ricardo5622
    @ricardo5622 Před 3 lety +2

    you're my new favorite youtuber, I haven't even heard your music yet.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks!
      If you've watched this video - you've heard some already :D

    • @ricardo5622
      @ricardo5622 Před 3 lety +1

      @@unfa00 Yes, i did! I typed the comment immediately after coming from another video you made where you were explaining about why FOSS for music.

  • @juliancorletti8647
    @juliancorletti8647 Před 4 lety +2

    Dude!!! I hope you know how much are you helping me. Thanks a lot!!! :) Im surelly start for now on Open Source

  • @jazzseba
    @jazzseba Před 4 lety +1

    Man!!! You are a light into CZcams's Linux music production darkness!!!

  • @buglover6666
    @buglover6666 Před 3 lety

    I was so frustrated, trying to pirate editing software on windows first, on Mac OS next and accomplished nothing, and than I found your blog. My life became so fucking easier with Linux and open source software, thank you!!!

  • @Lsp-plugIn
    @Lsp-plugIn Před 5 lety +1

    I like your the "Waaaaay cleaner" phrase! Ready to re-watch it more than 9000 times.
    Also you may notice that using LSP equalizer is "waaaaaay cheaper" when talking about CPU resources rather than any other EQ for Linux ;)
    Best, Vladimir

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety

      Actually - Calf Multiband Compressor sounds like LSP Multiband Compressor in the "vintage" mode. So I guess it must be using crossover filters...

    • @Lsp-plugIn
      @Lsp-plugIn Před 5 lety +1

      @@unfa00 That's the exact implementation of multiband compressor. Such implementations have problems at the split frequencies. That's because bands utilize FIR filters for splitting the input signal. FIR filters have nonlinear phase, that's why we get serious artifacts when summing final bands into output signal. Multiband compressor in 'Modern' mode uses dynamic filters instead, and the problem of phase distortion at the split frequencies does not occur.

  • @blackmagicmath1315
    @blackmagicmath1315 Před 5 lety +5

    Just a short comment while watching: I had the same problem with Linux Mint now lacking KDE support, so I switched to KDE Neon, working fine. Just setting it up for music production (mostly guitar recording)

  • @v1ctor174
    @v1ctor174 Před 3 lety +1

    Can't express the perfection of this video

  • @horrorhaiku3613
    @horrorhaiku3613 Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks for making this video. I'm tired of the jack modular workflow and I'm going to reign it in and use everything in Ardour like you with the exception being vcvrack.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety +1

      I've asked VCV Rack developers if they'd make an LV2 plug-in version, but they said they only intend VCV Rack to be run as a standalone program, and only in a single instance.

    • @horrorhaiku3613
      @horrorhaiku3613 Před 5 lety

      @@unfa00 That is a shame. There is the VeeSeeVSTRack VST thing but I've not used it. I don't think it works with many addons and probably lags behind significantly in versions.

  • @johnnybigpotato2404
    @johnnybigpotato2404 Před 10 měsíci

    I hope this message finds you many years after this video was made. I been doing Linux for a LONG time. I have tried to start using Ardour many times only to eventually get to a point where the manual makes no sense to me and there are no ... people like you yet paving the way for us idiots. Thanks Bro! :)

  • @SomethingImpromptu
    @SomethingImpromptu Před 5 lety +1

    As someone who is learning to use free DAWs and experimenting with producing for the very first time, this is an excellent video. I’ll be looking into a lot of these resources- especially the synth you recommended so highly! Thanks.

  • @enjoyer8700
    @enjoyer8700 Před 2 lety +1

    The beard and hair sold this video for me.

  • @PriyabDash
    @PriyabDash Před 2 lety +1

    Wow you are like my dream linux music maker ❤️❤️❤️

  • @TC_Geosci
    @TC_Geosci Před 3 lety

    Goosbumps @18:58, need more of this sound in my life.

  • @geussepe
    @geussepe Před 4 lety

    Man! How could I have missed this channel for so long?! This is just what I have been looking for! Keep it up, UNFA!

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks! I'm making videos and music all the time :)

  • @evanreeves5966
    @evanreeves5966 Před 4 lety +1

    I love Ardour. I just opened it today and it's so intuitive.

  • @momentum3425
    @momentum3425 Před rokem

    Awesome video. I am slowly trying out music production on Linux and you really are my guiding light with this, thank you !

  • @Ed-bf3fe
    @Ed-bf3fe Před 5 lety +1

    You can't go wrong with Manjaro. I went from Ubuntu to Mint and they were both great but Manjaro with KDE is light years ahead. Setup might not be as simple as Debian distros but once you get everything sorted, it's fantastic.

  • @meecool4005
    @meecool4005 Před 5 lety +1

    This is excellent. Wanting to go back to electronic music on Linux, I'm happy you did this video which gives a good overview of what is possible now. Thank you!

  • @ameyagundale
    @ameyagundale Před 5 lety +3

    Wow...!!!!!! What a video amazing research amazing thought process.. and above all of it making such an amazing nice flowing video. Truly well presented.. you are truly an inspiration for someone who wants to create a studio for low cost. I always wanted to do that in the past but due to no video on such stuff ended up buying a lot of softwares.. I wish I had seen this video a year ago..
    once again please accept my finest compliments for such brilliant work

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety +1

      Thank you! I'm really glad to hear that! Sorry I didn't manage to make it earlier :D

  • @rillonautikum
    @rillonautikum Před 5 lety +2

    Not only did you make me subscribe, you even made me to kill my windows hdd.
    And thanks for recommending some plugins! Gives us a good starting point!

  • @MaxMustermann-xf8zt
    @MaxMustermann-xf8zt Před 5 lety

    Dude, I didn't know that there is so much awesome and free software out there. It's so amazing :)

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety

      You're welcome :)
      There's much more that I haven't used much or learned yet like VCV Rack for example (a modern open-source modular synthesizer).

  • @morpheon_xyz
    @morpheon_xyz Před 4 lety +1

    Dude, this is awesome! I'm mainly a Windows user but I love Linux. Just installed mint last night and busy setting it up, and as someone who comes from FL Studio, I want to use Linux as my main OS, so I'm looking into native Linux programs instead of having to use Wine etc, so thank you so much for this! Subbed 😎

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks! I've got loads of videos about native Linux audio stuff so you should have plenty to explore and learn from on this channel :)

    • @morpheon_xyz
      @morpheon_xyz Před 4 lety

      @@unfa00 I'm sure I will, thank you. I tried adding the repositories for zyn-fusion so that I can download it, but unfortunately that seems to not work at this point in time. Ardour has been installed via the software manager, so that works, but I'm having difficulty with zyn-fusion right now. If there's an updated method to get it, I'd appreciate it, thank you

    • @teklife
      @teklife Před 4 lety

      welcome, and check out Ubuntu Studio 20.10 (it's pre-release but should work fine, and keep it updated), it's KDE by default now and includes Ardour 6!
      cdimage.ubuntu.com/ubuntustudio/dvd/current/HEADER.html

  • @oliveiramusic4u
    @oliveiramusic4u Před 2 lety

    Nicely done, Unfa. I'm a decade behind, but this was a well-thought out overview of some very interesting tools. Thank U.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 2 lety

      Thanks! I should probably update it sometime, because there's a lot new and awesome software there that was not available when I released this video.

  • @anastasiosvogiatzis92

    "In case this sounds fun" xD If there was one way to be convinced, that was it!

  • @sharklion3
    @sharklion3 Před 4 lety +2

    This video is really well done and helpful! Thank you, I love this channel!

  • @martinzatovic8598
    @martinzatovic8598 Před 4 lety

    The two seconds of Postal made my day, it was the first game I ran on Linux when I first installed it :D insightful video btw thanks

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety

      Thanks! I'm glad you enjoyed that little nugget :D At the time of making this video I've been playing it a lot with my wife.

  • @NAM999DnB
    @NAM999DnB Před 5 lety

    Lol, good video, I like those transitions you make, like jingles, glitches, distortions... excited about you considering Manjaro, as I have recently started using it.

  • @andrzejwawer6241
    @andrzejwawer6241 Před 4 lety +1

    Very good plugins. Thanks! I'm doing my own list of plugins. Probably I can add to your list TAL-Filter-2

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety +1

      TAL-Filter 2 is a very nice one indeed. I forgot about it!

  • @MaksTastic
    @MaksTastic Před rokem

    Thank you sooo soo much - You're sooo inspiring - Love Your Content!

  • @andrewjohnston359
    @andrewjohnston359 Před 5 lety +3

    Lots of new plugins since I stopped doing Linux audio Production a few years back. I used to use TAP autoscaling limiter on the masters then output via jack to Jamin multiband compression for mastering. Would be interested in the trying Calf limiter and multiband compressor

  • @handyhorner
    @handyhorner Před 3 lety +1

    Exactly what I was looking for. Thank you.
    🤘🏽🤘🤘🏾🤘🏿🤘🏼🤘🏻

  • @isabelomakhanya
    @isabelomakhanya Před 5 lety +4

    That beginning in Numinous! 😍 Can you please make "the making of Numinous"?

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 3 lety +1

      I've made a tutorial based on the experience of making Numinous:
      czcams.com/video/2I-8ZFflOmU/video.html

  • @DoubleAAmazin3
    @DoubleAAmazin3 Před 5 lety +2

    Arch is the way to go. Their repositories have so much software, no other distro comes close. Ubuntu based distros have outdated software in their repos.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety +1

      I've switched to Manjaro, and I love it. I thought with out KX Studio Repositories I'll be missing out, but I'm not :)

  • @jamesl3214
    @jamesl3214 Před 4 lety

    That track at the beginning is great!

  • @Bourbon-Canted-Ky-Windage

    Very informative and highly entertaining. I confess, I haven't used Linux since Redhat, around 1997. Ardour will take me from PT. But the dark colors are tough on my eyes these days. It's going to take awhile for me to lighten up the Ardour color scheme. As a huge fan of MB, just seems right to switch to Ardour.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety

      Thank you!
      Ardour has a few color themes, you can just switch to a bright one :)
      Go to Preferences > Appearance > Colors.

  • @Solarplexus0
    @Solarplexus0 Před 3 lety

    Incredible video! Thanks so much

  • @unfa00
    @unfa00  Před 2 lety

    Wow. We crossed 104k views on this one. Nice!

  • @DiegoBg82
    @DiegoBg82 Před 3 lety +1

    Hermano me inspiras siempre he querido usar Linux para producir audio , gracias

  • @moquajimoges8517
    @moquajimoges8517 Před 2 lety

    A very interesting video to use as a reference. @unfa, I feel that it would be interesting for you to redo this video from time to time. Almost like a state of the art of the free and open-source music production. I'd watch it :)

  • @bmusic9817
    @bmusic9817 Před 5 lety

    Great video, I'm looking forward to your next about open-source software for music production

  • @eugenek1180
    @eugenek1180 Před 4 lety +2

    Wow. Linux has come along in the past 20 years!

    • @teklife
      @teklife Před 4 lety +2

      sure has.
      check out and support Ubuntu Studio. i'm not affiliated with that project in any way, but what a great distro it is and what an awesome bundle of software that it comes with. very nice job, and, beginning with 20.10, it will use (a slightly stripped down, lean and mean) KDE by default.

  • @m4dmood
    @m4dmood Před 3 lety

    Hi, thanks for all of your contents. I would like to start following a free-software philosophy and here i'm discovering many useful and powerful utilities for my Ubuntu machine. That's wonderful!

  • @vishnunath1524
    @vishnunath1524 Před 2 lety

    Great video Unfa, really helpful that you put a list of FOSS music production tools. If possible please do a 2022 update to this list. Thanks.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 2 lety

      Hey, thanks! I'd love to make a new version, but my resources are very limited lately.

  • @demonicsweaters
    @demonicsweaters Před 5 lety

    I've never had much success with those session managers either. They save stuff, but when you try to reload them it always seems to do completely insane stuff, haha.

  • @Blvck_Lvntern
    @Blvck_Lvntern Před rokem

    Great videos, great videos, great videos!!!❤️‍🔥❤️‍🔥🔥

  • @Dude_Slick
    @Dude_Slick Před 5 lety +1

    I'm doing my music work on Manjaro Kde, with Harrison Mixbus, which is built on Ardour, Guitarix amp simulator, Hydrogen Drum Machine, Calf plugins and a smidgen of Rosegarnen or LMMS. It seems to be the only plasma option my hardware has zero issues with. Hope this helps.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety

      I'm running Manjaro KDE as well for a few months now, and I love it.
      Also - I'm gonna install the same for my wife really soon, but hushhh...!

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety

      BTW - submit something to my next livestream, Dude Slick! You'll get some feedback from and others live, some exposure and dopamine :)

    • @Dude_Slick
      @Dude_Slick Před 5 lety

      @@unfa00
      Cool. I love your channel man. I'm not really doing a lot of music. I'm a guitar and bass builder who wrote quite a few songs back in the day. But now I just like to record to put my instruments through their paces before putting them on the market.

    • @Dude_Slick
      @Dude_Slick Před 5 lety

      @@unfa00 I don't have much laying around But this is something I threw together a few years back when I first started delving into the world of DAWs. It's my little homage to the old school surf jam.
      czcams.com/video/Ec4JrAYBqX4/video.html

    • @Dude_Slick
      @Dude_Slick Před 5 lety

      PS: The drums are Hydrogen. The two guitars and the 5 string bass used are mine build from scratch.

  • @robertbacklund4438
    @robertbacklund4438 Před 4 lety

    If you like using Mint or any other distro but you do not like their choice of their default desktop environment you can easily use any desktop or window manager with the necessary utilities that come with a desktop environment. I was using Mint and I just installed KDE from the Mint repositories then I had Mint with the plasma desktop, easy peasy. I am now running MX Linux because you do not need to use systemd, I am old school and prefer the old traditional init system. If you are interested just do a search of systemd vs init. MX also does not ship with KDE plasma it has XFCE one of my least favorite desktops and I just installed KDE from the MX repos. MX is based on Debian and so I added the KX Studio repos in the MX package manager and installed KX Studio.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety

      Thanks, though I'm really liking Manjaro :)

  • @desmondsparrs
    @desmondsparrs Před 2 lety

    damn this video is ridiculously well made! Great work Unfa! Watching your videos to learn how to actually do audio stuff in Linux, instead of messing around with fuck all else.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 2 lety

      Thank you! Lots of work went into it! Good luck :) And if you have any trouble or want to meet other Linux audio enthusiasts - check out my community chat!
      chat.unfa.xyz

    • @desmondsparrs
      @desmondsparrs Před 2 lety

      @@unfa00 Im on your Discord already, so you have two chat-groups huh?

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 2 lety +1

      @@desmondsparrs No, it's two services bridged into one :) Haven't you read #newcomer-info ?

    • @desmondsparrs
      @desmondsparrs Před 2 lety +1

      @@unfa00 I reread the newcomer info, I def remember something about RocketChat but my attention-span and memory retention is crapp nowadays. Will check it out thx!

    • @desmondsparrs
      @desmondsparrs Před 2 lety

      @@unfa00 should I include the #1234 number tag in my Discord-name? Not sure how this works. keep up the great work! I admire your passion!

  • @my_music_concept6646
    @my_music_concept6646 Před 3 lety

    you are amazing man

  • @eegoal
    @eegoal Před 4 lety

    This video is just perfect.

  • @Philipplus
    @Philipplus Před 5 lety

    Nice set of tips. Keep up the good work!
    Cheers!

  • @beatnikcafe
    @beatnikcafe Před 2 lety

    I’m looking for recommendations for a very stable and lightweight midi sequencer to sequence a full set of music, up to 90 minutes. I would like some ability to loop sections and then continue with the next section. When performing I only want to deal with a few commands that should be triggered by midi. For example: play, pause, loop current section, continue from current section, continue next loop (this would essentially complete the current predefined looping section and continue to play and loop the next predefined loop section), stop all, stop with fade (predefined fade time), stop and fade out current loop (that means the loop plays until it ends with fade out timed to arrive at same time), continue next section (useful if I’ve paused or stopped and then want to continue with the show), skip (will ignore the next section and follow next commands as if the next section doesn’t exist), Jump to next section with fade out and fade in (this allows me to skip ahead if I’m in the middle of a long section and don’t want to play it out), that’s about it. I don’t need a software that can do all of this it everything but mostly the ability to loop sections and then jump to the next in an elegant manner. I can approximate a lot of this behavior in Logic but I’d prefer something midi only and lightweight. Ideally something that can run on a Raspberry Pi would make it much easier to integrate into my hardware setup and not require a laptop for live use. Which is why to be able to send the commands with a midi device. One other thing, I don’t want to have to hard sync this with my hardware instead I will simply plan out the tempo changes and make manual adjustments, so if the sequencer can be nudged faster or slower as needed that would be a plus. Another reason I want midi only if possible. I realize it looks like a huge amount of requirements but really it’s just a wish list. Thanks in advance, oh one more thing, cross platform support would be great too, if I could do all my show prep on my Mac and then just copy over to the RPi for tech run through it would be a good workflow.

  • @budgetkeyboardist
    @budgetkeyboardist Před rokem

    I'm a Logic Pro user, but I really want to learn about DAW options on both Windows and Linux so that I can do a variety of things on my channel in the future. I'm familiar with Linux - I'm running Ubuntu on my homemade arcade cabinet. I just subscribed to your channel, because it looks like a great resource!

  • @EliasDorneles
    @EliasDorneles Před 3 lety

    Thank you so much for sharing all that!!
    You're awesome! ^^

  • @lucasaraujo1662
    @lucasaraujo1662 Před 2 lety

    just, thank you

  • @stiqsify
    @stiqsify Před 4 lety

    I'm loving your videos. Keep it up.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety

      Thanks! Will do :)

  • @r8bior
    @r8bior Před 2 lety

    Video was worth my time 👌

  • @Johnscompany
    @Johnscompany Před 5 lety

    Really great video. I like many of them.

  • @joshuadavid7477
    @joshuadavid7477 Před 4 lety

    I just installed manjaro kde so far so good!

  • @StannyObelisk
    @StannyObelisk Před 4 lety

    I think the ardour plugins are really great because the the meters/UI show up in the mixer window.

    • @teklife
      @teklife Před 4 lety

      huh? ardour has no plug ins of its own afaik, they're all 3rd party.

  • @gaurav2979
    @gaurav2979 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for sharing man, God bless you

  • @Old_Man_Jay
    @Old_Man_Jay Před 4 lety

    SUPER SMELLY SHAMPOO SPICE!

  • @ChrisD__
    @ChrisD__ Před 4 lety

    0:40 Bruh, I was doubting you when you said that, but then what you made was very VERY close to what I was thinking. XD

  • @NAM999DnB
    @NAM999DnB Před 5 lety +5

    Could you make about keyboard controllers that are Linux and Linux-DAW/Linux-Synths friendly? (Sorry if you already did it)

  • @sunscorpiochris
    @sunscorpiochris Před 5 lety +3

    I installed Ubuntu (Not studio version) and haven’t found a way to change repositories to find Zyn Fusion. Or, I did download Zyn (and subfx) but can’t figure out the settings in ardor to find the sounds to start with? I’m used to “Kits” but am going to study and support your work so I can become even half as good as you at modding and creating my own sounds. Can’t thank you enough!! I’ll install Linux Mint on my studio computer and see if I can find Zyn fusion. If you would maybe consider makin a video on setting up a computer from scratch that uses ardor and Zyn running mint, that would be amazing.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety +2

      Hey! Thanks!
      Have you seen this video maybe?
      czcams.com/video/B66VtJBN2N0/video.html

  • @solartonytony5868
    @solartonytony5868 Před 4 lety

    great exposure, could you plz go about a bit on your mic setup, mic you use, app, filter(s), what not ?

  • @iksdk
    @iksdk Před 4 lety +2

    Ha ha ha LOL! Seems that you like the postal game. Me to, I’ll go postal when I’m frustrated by someone or something like software pissing me of. To see that particular game in your video bring up old memories from the time I spent doing coding and modifications to the game. Thumbs up 👍 Dude let’s see some more of your great work 😎
    Ps. At first when Your face turned up on the living room alter aka tv 📺 I laughed inside thinking 💭 that dude looks just like, well the DUDE. When you stated speaking I was saying ; it is the dude. Then postal came up and I laughed out so freaking loud that all of Denmark 🇩🇰 was able to hear it 😂😂😂😂🐥🤯🤪👍

  • @brianobey4368
    @brianobey4368 Před 2 lety

    I like this a lot

  • @ramilioverduzco
    @ramilioverduzco Před 4 lety +2

    Can anyone help???: when i use hydrogen drums my sounds shuts down. I can't find why in internet searches (i'm a newbie).

  • @andx4024
    @andx4024 Před 5 lety

    very good video. thanks. so many good opensource plugins. i thing same of them should be compiled with Ardour. for example Samplv1 - Add Track -> Sampler track

  • @gabrgomes
    @gabrgomes Před 5 lety

    I'm also a plama fan and have tried lots of distros for audio production, and for me the most reliable and fun to use has been Arch Linux.

  • @seanspartan2023
    @seanspartan2023 Před 4 lety +1

    I love Linux Mint!

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety

      I've since switched to Manjaro, because I need KDE, and Linux Mint has removed KDE as an official DE in their distro.

  •  Před 4 lety +4

    Try using debian, that has been my main OS for 12 years

    • @JohnDoe-zw5jr
      @JohnDoe-zw5jr Před 4 lety

      do you use it for music production as well?

    •  Před 4 lety

      @@JohnDoe-zw5jr I don't do music production but I use Debian for everything

    • @teklife
      @teklife Před 4 lety

      i'm using debian in the form of MX Linux 19.2, and it is REALLY NICE. it is so snappy on my computers and the MX Tools are phenomenal.
      MX Package Installer has a nice bunch of apps organized by category, by popularity, stability, testing(bleeding edge), AND Flathub! you can also easily select and change the kernel.
      BTW, you're also using Debian when you use Ubuntu, or any derivative of Ubuntu, and Ubuntu Studio is impressive as an out of the box creative tools powerhouse to carry around on a usb stick. it's come in handy for me in such a form several times.

  • @CyroCoders
    @CyroCoders Před 3 lety

    I love mint with ude

  • @tomormiston6592
    @tomormiston6592 Před 5 lety +2

    Well presented 👍
    KDE Neon is works well for me, with a Ubuntu 18.04 LTS base and a stable but cutting edge KDE plasma desktop.
    Failing that just Kbuntu.🤔

    • @BolnichkaRecords
      @BolnichkaRecords Před 5 lety

      What's wrong with Kubuntu?

    • @teklife
      @teklife Před 4 lety

      i've personally had a better experience with Kubuntu, and the softwares are more up to date. i upgrade upon every new relase (do-release-upgrade), simple.

  • @henriquematias1986
    @henriquematias1986 Před 3 lety

    You asked to prove you wrong on the synthesizer, check Surge Plugin.. I think it’s the best sounding open source synth and one of the most complete yet simple to use synthesizer plugin ( :

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 3 lety +1

      Ah yes. Surge was not on my radar back when I was making this video, but I have made several vidoes and livestreams about it since! It is a fantastic open-source instrument!

    • @henriquematias1986
      @henriquematias1986 Před 3 lety

      @@unfa00 yes, definitely one of the best sounding filters, oscillators and pretty awesome modulations and effects..it's my favourite by far!

  • @razek666
    @razek666 Před 3 lety

    Awesome!

  • @wilfig
    @wilfig Před 3 lety

    New to Linux. Just experimenting on an old Macbook Pro at the moment, to see if Linux will work for me.
    I initially chose AV Linux - MX Edition 64bit to try, My DAW of choice is Bitwig Studio.
    I tried to install Bitwig Studio on AVL, but was met with this:
    "No Lintian available.
    Please install using sudo apt-get install lintian."
    Went to the terminal, typed it in, and it then said:
    "Package Lintian is not available, but is referred to by another package.
    This may mean that the package is missing, has been obsoleted, or is only available from another source."
    So, I gave up on AV Linux, and tried straight Ubuntu, which the Bitwig team suggests.
    HATED Ubuntu. Kept crashing.
    Then tried Linux Mint 20.1, which is Ubuntu based. I was able to install Bitwig Studio on it with no problem,
    but I don't know if Mint is properly optimized for audio production. I'm having crackling problems with the audio just using one
    CPU intensive native Bitwig synth plugin. Running just audio is ok, but after a few minutes of letting it loop,
    the audio quality steadily gets worse. I'm running audio through an iConnectAUDIO4+ in ALSA.
    Truth be told, I'd rather use AV Linux. It seems to be optimized for audio right out of the gate.
    Do you have any pointers on how to get Bitwig to install on AVL, or suggestions to optimize Mint for audio,
    or perhaps I should try a different distro?
    I'm still thinking of trying Ubuntu Studio to see if that works, even though Ubuntu straight was a bitter pill to swallow.
    I'm running on a 2009 Macbook Pro, Intel Core 2 Duo 2.53ghz CPU, 8gb RAM.
    Linux Mint 20.1 Cinnamon, 5.4.0-58 generic kernel.
    Thanks, Unfa. I dig your videos. Very helpful.

  • @DanielAraujoNazar
    @DanielAraujoNazar Před 5 lety +2

    Thank you so much for this amazing work. I too have a problem with "industry standards" (although it is a bit of a pain when a client brings in a protools project for me to mix or add tracks to - guess that's what standards are good for).
    Anyhow, I haven't worked with media production for the last year and I was happy to hear Cockos Reaper and Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve are finding their way into Linux. Not libre, I know, but I love the way Reaper is thought around its users and the blazing speed of Resolve's rendering.
    Ever tried to give Mint MATE a chance? It's kind of flat but very light and useful. And you can install KDE libraries to run software specific to that (I edited my videogame cover videos using kdenlive that way)
    Thank you again for the great work! Lots of videos to be watched ahead.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety

      Thanks! Ardour has an option to import Pro Tools sessions - though I never tried that out.

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety

      I haven't tried MATE - I really like KDE Plasma, and also - it has features like forcing specific window manager properties on certain windows or applications - which is very handy in my workflow, I haven't seen any other DE having such options yet.

  • @violin-schwerin
    @violin-schwerin Před 2 lety

    I use reaper for tracking/editing and mixbus32c for mixing, works wonderfully on Linux! Arch with pipewire

  • @TadDoylemusic
    @TadDoylemusic Před 4 lety

    Thanks unfa!

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety +1

      You're welcome!

  • @teklife
    @teklife Před 4 lety

    i don't understand why you don't use ubuntu studio which comes with a lot of good stuff pre-installed and a low latency kernel and the DE is xfce which is and fairly sane, customizable, and lightweight.
    And installing the kde desktop environment is just a simple terminal command away or just using synaptic package manager.
    Customizing which software you want at the install is a really nice thing about ubuntu studio, and because it is an official flavor of ubuntu, you could just keep upgrading from release to release and of course you can use ppa and select proprietary drivers as easily as you can in linux mint.
    I've tried to manjaro a few times over the years, and in my experience, after a while something breaks that i can't really sort out and i don't really want to spend the time doing so, it's better for tinkerers and people who like to fix stuff that breaks.

  • @HelamanGile
    @HelamanGile Před 4 lety +1

    I use Linux mint 19.3 or something of that variant

  • @Racosz
    @Racosz Před 4 lety +1

    6:37 - What are you exactly referring to?

  • @umeshkumarasamy6608
    @umeshkumarasamy6608 Před 5 lety +2

    You've covered a lot of ground here. Each of the tools require their own Seperate video I suppose.

  • @danvideo2948
    @danvideo2948 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video ! Thanks. Could you make a video about live setup ? How to play live ? I mean, how to change setup between each song, obviously without a new session for every track.. How would you play your album live ? Giutar, multiple keyboard..

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety

      That is a big and interesting topic, though I don't think I have enough experience playing live to make it justice. I used to play with a band and I used Carla to trigger ZynAddSubFX using different MIDI channels + add more effects and manipulate them as I played. In Carla you can assign MIDI CC to plug-in controls and also filter that by MIDI channels, so I'd really focus on that. I considered Ardour but it's not really suited for that. I have written some Bash scripts to maintain a MIDI connection in case I disconnect my keyboard by accident (simply run jack_connext in a loop). Again - I haven't done this in a few years, and it never worked flawlessly, when I've been doing it. I had my setup pass the soundcheck, but fail during the show. Not a way to make your band mates happy - I can tell you that. Though we played some gigs without issues too...

    • @danvideo2948
      @danvideo2948 Před 5 lety

      @@unfa00 But if you make your track in Ardour (or any daw) with a bit of sound design, it becomes complicated to replicate the sound :/ What about this: ardour loaded with track bases, and used as mixer and soundbank. Remains the midi setup to change between each track outside ardour .. Doable ?

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 5 lety

      If I were to "solo" perform one of my pieces I'd play along the Ardour session, but I'd freeze whatever I can to lower CPU usage a d potential glitches, pick some parts I can play live, learn them and do it that way. Then I'd have a second Ardour session ready for the next song, and I'll figure a way to load/unload the tracks as I went on. I think this could work, but I'd be pretty rigid, as it's not loop-based. Another way would be to export loops to something like Luppp and perform the whole arrangement with a MIDI controller like that.

    • @HeikkiKetoharju
      @HeikkiKetoharju Před 5 lety

      I have done some live performances with Linux. All them were with fixed setup: so I loaded all the synths and effects and then changed presets with Midi Program changes and partially by hand.
      It was a very stable setup: never crashed and worked flawlessly. I used Jack Patchbay to automate all the connections. Zyn was my main synth and I used Rackarrak as my main effects source. In addition I had Mellotron samples through LinuxSampler and a soundfont at QSynth. Sometimes I also used an old sampler called Specimen to play short musical samples.
      I loaded them all to different virtual desktops and even used program called Mididings to get drumpads of my midi keyboard to change desktops. It was quite cool and I used to awe my bandmates with that.

    • @HeikkiKetoharju
      @HeikkiKetoharju Před 5 lety +1

      Here is my writing about that live setup, mainly focusing to the bash script that loads everything up:
      heikki.ketoharju.info/2012/11/session-management-in-linux/

  • @GennaroGiugliano
    @GennaroGiugliano Před 5 lety

    Hi Unfa,great video,many thanks for your tutorial gnu linux audio production :)

  • @jarkkojs
    @jarkkojs Před 3 lety

    I try to stay heck away from specifically multimedia targeted distributions because they tend to have things that are not great for overall system balance. It's a better idea to pick something made for general desktop use and then change the settings so that you know what has been actually modified. For reconfiguring the kernel behavior, I wrote these instructions: listed.to/@jarkko/20275/configuring-linux-kernel-for-low-latency-audio. There's a lot of instructions around the Internet but they often lack the explanation that gives the context for the settings, have varying mix of kernel and user space settings illogically ordered and sometimes go "over the edge" with resource limits etc.That's why I thought to write yet another post just with the kernel scope and brief explanation of the context for each setting.

  • @kBarBeats
    @kBarBeats Před rokem

    great video and great channel, very informative. i'm getting into some beat making myself using ardour in arch and i use most of the plugins you showed in the video, except fabla2 which i discovered in your vid and the concept is amazing. only i got a problem with the UI, as most of the text are some random unreadable symbols, but the funny thing is the plugin works pretty well. any idea on how to fix the UI issue? did you ran into similar issues? keep the good work going!

  • @DavideCerriGA
    @DavideCerriGA Před 5 lety

    Great video.

  • @aliencreation8744
    @aliencreation8744 Před 4 lety

    I love your music and wish it was used in video games
    -would be cool

    • @unfa00
      @unfa00  Před 4 lety

      Thanks! I'm actually making music for video games at work :D