Rosegarden users?

Audio Plugin Hosts and other audio software applications discussion
Post Reply New Topic
RELATED
PRODUCTS

Post

hi all :wink:

having intention to create a workstation audio linux based..
i would like to know pros and cons of this sequencer
it seems to be "the closest native equivalent to Cubase® for Linux" (Sound on Sound)

someone already tested it??
http://www.rosegardenmusic.com/
any information is much appreciated
thank you!

Post

I had a try a few months ago, but got caught up in dependency nightmares and gave up. That was on a not-entirely-new Fedora Core 3 system, IIRC. I'll probably rework that machine in Ubuntu and have another go before too long.

The typesetting system that works with it, Lilypond, appears capable of producing output better than most or all commercial musical typesetting products. :-) Impressive stuff there.

Post

If you like spending most of your time fiddling with operating systems and configuration stuff then Linux is for you, if not - keep away.

Post

thanks Meffy and UltraJv

hummm, your replies are not much encouraging :|
i just want to use decent audio appz, without tweak the system every time
but, now the question is:
create a workstation audio under Linux
using plugins and virtual intruments
.. is it possible? :?

Post

I just installed Mepis-Linux on my new 3GHZ P.IV. Rosegarden was included, but I use Ardour, which is a bit more like Protools. Very happy so far.
You could try installing DeMuDi, from agnula.org.
It's a pretty solid, audio/multimedia only distro.

Post

thanks for the advice warp x 8)
never heard Ardour before!
just cheked -> http://ardour.org/ .. very promising!
surely i will try DeMuDi
thanks again!

Post

The problem with DeMuDi is it's based on kernel 2.4, which lacks support for many recent chipsets. It won't recognise the NIC on my NForce2 based system for example, which makes it a bit hard to upgrade using apt-get.

I think it's best to use recent Debian-based systems (Ubuntu, Mepis, there are others) and use apt-get/Synaptic to install and upgrade. Ubuntu provides very good hardware support out of the box, I'm not familiar with Mepis.

Groet, Erik
Pop music delenda est.
Image

Post

tetraplan wrote:The problem with DeMuDi is it's based on kernel 2.4, which lacks support for many recent chipsets.
Which DeMuDI version? 1.0? I would think that the more recent 1.21 would have kernel 2.6 support.

Post

parky wrote:
tetraplan wrote:The problem with DeMuDi is it's based on kernel 2.4, which lacks support for many recent chipsets.
Which DeMuDI version? 1.0? I would think that the more recent 1.21 would have kernel 2.6 support.
Not the release version, IIRC. Could be changed by now, though, I read this nearly a month ago (would have downloaded otherwise).

Groet, Erik
Pop music delenda est.
Image

Post

tetraplan wrote:
parky wrote:
tetraplan wrote:The problem with DeMuDi is it's based on kernel 2.4, which lacks support for many recent chipsets.
Which DeMuDI version? 1.0? I would think that the more recent 1.21 would have kernel 2.6 support.
Not the release version, IIRC. Could be changed by now, though, I read this nearly a month ago (would have downloaded otherwise).

Groet, Erik
I know some Linux distros don't make it obvious that they have both the 2.4 and 2.6 kernel. In some you need to type 'linux26' when starting the install to specify the kernel.

Post

parky wrote:I know some Linux distros don't make it obvious that they have both the 2.4 and 2.6 kernel. In some you need to type 'linux26' when starting the install to specify the kernel.
Ah, OK.
Interesting. Thanks.

Groet, Erik
Pop music delenda est.
Image

Post Reply

Return to “Hosts & Applications (Sequencers, DAWs, Audio Editors, etc.)”