• deadcatbounce@reddthat.com
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    7 hours ago

    I’d suggest no-one ever dual-boot Windows with anything. There are to many mishaps when Windows takes it into their head to fuck the bootloader.

    Put the OS into a VM. If you only use Windows for one app put Windows into the VM. Otherwise put Linux into the VM until you find you’re mostly using Linux.

    Unless you have an old PC laying around …

  • utopiah@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    Focus on productivity and pleasure, so make the transition easier :

    • try Linux without dual boot, e.g. https://distrosea.com/ (I made a 30min video discussion if you are curious)
    • try Linux on a USB stick to get persistence and not be afraid of using private data
    • try dual boot with default on Windows, your important data backed-up (e.g. music you created)
    • try dual boot with default on Linux and Ableton or whatever you need on Wine, if it doesn’t work in virtual machine
    • try boot on just Linux with Wine
    • try boot on Linux with Ableton FLOSS equivalents (few listed in this thread)
    • try boot on Linux with e.g Ardour or LMMS but genuinely benefit from FLOSS by making and sharing your own plugins

    The entire process must be risk free and fun!

  • tortina_original@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Few weeks ago I have noticed that my Presonus account is offering me to download Studio One Pro 7, in deb or flatpak format. I use Linux desktop for everything except audio work (still use Windows machine for that) so when I checked my Presonus account from Linux box I was quite shocked.

    Sadly, attempt to upload the image from the phone (using Boost app) doesn’t work so I can’t upload and can’t be bothered to upload elsewhere then share URL, etc.

    I couldn’t get bothered to try installing it earlier since I don’t want to run S1 on this box.

    But just for the sake of it, I have now tried installing flatpak file and it completed.

    I don’t use flatpak much but trying to do…

    flatpak run com.presonus.studioapp7

    … failed with “Failed to connect to Wayland display”.

    I spent 0 seconds on reading about S1 Pro for Linux and have no intention to bother with it further but if you do use S1 on Windows you might have Linux download available as well. Give it a try if you are interested.

    What exactly it requires to run, I have no idea.

    But it is really surprising development.

    Edit: hah, after i removed that flatpak i just installed, a notification popped up saying “Studio One is a Wayland application and won’t run in X11 session.”

  • Eugenia@lemmy.ml
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    13 hours ago

    There are several commercial options for Linux. The most-Ableton software out there is Bitwig Studio that has a Linux port. However, it’s expensive. The cheapest commercial solution, with a bit of learning curve but powerful nonetheless, is Reaper.

    However, if you want to go 100% open source, there’s Ardour and LMMS (which is a lot like FL Studio). Ardour 9, which is expected by the end of the year, will be more MIDI-friendly than it used to be. LMMS latest git version (offered as binary on their site) has some good new features compared to their stable version, however, there’s still no vst3 support.

    I’m an visual artist and I used Photoshop for years to edit my hand-painted scanned paintings. When I moved to Linux, and Gimp3 was out, I was finally ready to leave Photoshop behind. Some features of Photoshop aren’t there, but I was ready to leave them behind. Same with video, I used to have a rather popular blog about color grading with Resolve. I moved to kdenlive, which has none of these tools or plugins. It’s a decision that I simply had to make. I wanted to use foss tools, and that was the price to pay. I’m cool with my decision.

    If you gotta go commercial, go with Reaper. The people (a small team of 3 or 4 I believe) behind it are really cool, and they’re doing it for the love of it, their profit is very small.

  • Wappen@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I can greatly recommend Reaper to you, in case Ableton + Wine doesn’t work out.

    I only recently got into music making as a hobby so my overall perspective might be limited, but other DAWs I tried included:

    • Ardour
    • Bitwig
    • LMMS
    • Zrythm

    I settled with Reaper bc of it’s customizability, freedom in workflow and cheap price without compromising in pro features. It’s actually completely free as long as you are evaluating buying it, which is up to you for how long. And the customizability is off the charts compared to any other DAW.

    But what really sold Reaper to me was the lack of hurdles that got into my way of learning to make music.

    Have fun

    • Thebigguy@lemmy.ml
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      11 hours ago

      Don’t forget renoise, if you like trackers it’s great and very affordable.

  • Oikio@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    I am a hobbyist and was using ableton live before. As mentioned by others, unless you dual boot - try bitwig studio for similar experience. It is from people who worked in ableton. Have a trial, pirate if can’t afford now.

    Foss alternative - ardour is great, but you will have to bring your own plug in suit.

    Yabridge tool can help you to run windows vsts on Linux, but not everything works. And beware - it does not work with flatpak version Bitwig, at least it did not.

  • Narri N.@lemmy.ml
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    15 hours ago

    I haven’t personally used Ableton ever but am a hobbying musician, and pro-audio is possible on Linux as well as running non-native applications via Wine. I found this just searching, there’s apparently a Discord group also dedicated to this project.

    Usually doing a web search like “xyz windows program+linux” will produce results, and putting in your distro name will produce better. Anyway, good luck on your journey!

  • Thebigguy@lemmy.ml
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    11 hours ago

    I posted this already as a reply but if you like trackers check out renoise it costs 70€ and is very powerful and runs on almost anything.

  • pirat@lemmy.ml
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    13 hours ago

    Someone in here mentioned bitwig.

    I started on abelton and moved to bitwig around 3.X and have been with it ever since.

    I love all the different modules and the grid which has give me a lot more expressive control over my sounds.

    they are similar yet different; I believe the core bitwig team were ex ableton devs who wanted to take things in a different direction.

    I know it’s silly but one of the biggest things that I like about bitwig is customizable shortcuts; this is especially good if you’re coming from ableton because if your a shortcut key wizard you can easily remap similar functions.

    if you’ve got an extensive VST collection you can run them with wine + yabridge.

    Bitwig is not the only option, but coming from ableton if you want to run single boot it is the most similar (IMO) to Ableton.

    Happy to answer any questions you may have about it as well.