Log InCreate An Account
  1. Developers
  2. »
  3. r
  4. »
  5. rncbc.org

Latest News, Product Listings and Discussion for rncbc.org.

Products by rncbc.org

Latest reviews of rncbc.org products

Qtractor

Reviewed By danboid [all]
August 19th, 2012
Version reviewed: 0.5.5svn on Linux

qtractor has nothing to do with agriculture - Qt is the name of the toolkit Rui has used to create his DAW that you can use to create your 'tracs' - hence qtractor!

I'm not going to go over qtractors many features as they're all listed on its homepage. You just need to know that its a reasonably mature, GPL licensed MIDI and audio sequencer for Linux and you really should try it soon if you haven't done so already because its an absolute joy to use!

When it comes to Linux DAWs, for a number of years now qtractor has been the only serious alternative to Ardour. However, qtractor is primarily a MIDI sequencer that also handles audio where as Ardour, as of August 2012, is still yet to make a stable release that includes MIDI sequencing support.

It is important to note that qtractor has a different target market to Ardour. Ardour is aimed directly at high-end, pro-audio users who may otherwise be using non-free solutions like Pro Tools whereas qtractor is aimed more at hobbyist and bedroom/garage studios - well at the moment anyway. Ardour has long been available for OS X as well as Linux but qtractor is proudly Linux only and as a result is one of the very best Linux only apps, not just in audio, available.

qtractor is currently at 0.5.5 which I'd say is quite modest considering what it is already capable of. If Rui continues developing qtractor at the pace he has been over the last several years then when 1.0.0 does get released I have no doubts it will give some of the big name DAWS a good run for their money and will be incomparably better than whatever they released as a 1.0 in most cases as qtractor is obviously very well coded. Outside of running dodgy plugins - I'm not sure I've ever seen qtractor crash and its binary comes in at less than 1MB which explains why it runs sooo fast even on older hardware.

qtractor has often been the first app to adopt new Linux audio technologies such as LV2 with its many updates and extensions. Whilst I was doing lots of testing for Ardour 3 I would frequently use qtractor as a reference. Whilst Ardour, not only because it has a few full time devs working on it and has also been around almost twice as long as qtractor, offers more high end features for audio work than qtractor currently does, I have found qtractor to be much more stable with notably fewer quirks. Rui is always very responsive and intolerant of bugs in his apps.

It is only in the last year or so that qtractor has finally gained some much requested and long awaited automation support for both audio and MIDI tracks. Whilst this works well enough, its not feature complete right now as you can't copy and paste either segments of or whole automation parts yet. My other most wanted feature before I think qtractor is seriously ready for world domination is the ability to create tempo ramps - when qtractor can do both these I'll be made up! qtractors biggest problem is that it is developed purely as a hobby by Rui and that there is no other major contributor to its development so progress in respect to major new features is slow.

AV Linux 6 has just been released so if nothing I've said has put you off I would highly recommend you download that distro (if you're not running Linux already), get it installed and give qtractor a try - I'm sure you'll be glad you did!

To finish I'd like to thank Rui for this outstanding contribution to (Linux) music and audio software. qtractor is not only one of the very best Linux apps in any category, its one of the best apps wrote for Qt, its a reference for others trying to develop Linux audio software of all sorts and Rui's dedication, good humour and exemplary support for all of his apps is to be highly commended.

Read Review
samplv1

Reviewed By danboid [all]
June 18th, 2012
Version reviewed: Debian on Linux

At last!

Everyone interested in creating electronic music under Linux should raise a few cheers and give thanks to RNCBC for creating this fantastic, loooooooong overdue plugin! Considering MIDI is entering its fourth decade, some of the long-standing Linux DAWs are over a decade old and there are at least a dozen DAW's for the Linux platform, its amazing to me that it took up until 2012 for Linux to gain a native sampler plugin that:

1 - Is easy to use

2 - Works as a (LV2) plugin

3 - Doesn't convert and store its sample data as inefficient text which is often 3/4 times the size of the original uncompressed wav, as is the case with Highlife

I suppose its a good a sign as any that free and open source music production tools are finally coming of age in 2012!

Before samplv1 arrived, Highlife was the only choice of a user-friendly, LV2 (or Linux VST) sampler. Apart from samplv1 using common audio files and not converting the sample data in to text as already mentioned, it also has the advantages of loading much faster (and hence I'd expect it uses less memory but I've not checked yet), you can automate its FX, its 100% native to Linux and its being actively maintained - none of which I can say about the open source HighLife.

No, samplv1 won't open your Kontakt libraries and nor do I expect it ever will. Those of you wanting to use SFZ's, gigasampler or with more heavy duty sample playback requirements will likely be best off sticking with Linuxsampler, qsampler etc. but I'm sure there will be plenty of use cases where samplv1 is going to be more than good enough for the job and it compliments Rui's many other excellent Linux audio apps perfectly.

Legendary work again Rui!

:D

Read Review

Timeline of Latest Product Changes [view all]

Latest News from rncbc.org