On Sat, Jul 02, 2005 at 11:02:38AM +0100, tim hall wrote: > > Yes, I took my time getting round to looking at Ardour. I have found it very > intuitive to use and as you say, you only need to know a limited set of > functions to record and master a basic multitrack piece. I'm beginning to > think of it as the audio equivalent to GIMP, rather than the Linux equivalent > to ProTools. > > tim hall > http://glastonburymusic.org.uk --- --- --- Good way of looking at it. After only two full days with Ardour, I have become surprisingly familiar and relatively comfortable with it and am starting to like Ardour a *lot*. I clicked the "Support Ardour" PayPal link at the ardour.org website and donated some money to the project. I used to use Apple Macintosh computers before switching to Linux about 1998, and spent a fortune on graphics and MIDI/audio programs such as Adobe PhotoShop, Opcode's Studio Vision Pro, etc., and their regular upgrades. Now I get to use all this equivalent-functionality stuff in Linux for *free*, so I have begun to donate to various projects whose products I use, in a kind of random and sporadic, impulsive but regular way. I'm very grateful for them. I'm also grateful for your suggestions, as well as Mark C's and Thorsten W's, regarding the arrangement and mix of the little piece I recently recorded. I re-recorded the piece from scratch taking into consideration every suggestion. Not that anyone would care, but the new version is here: http://www.xscd.com/pub/music/ogg/lonesome_butte.ogg --the old version (for comparison) is here: http://www.xscd.com/pub/music/ogg/lonesome_butte_old.ogg -steve d -- ---------------------------------------------------------------- Earth laughs in flowers. -Ralph Waldo Emerson ----------------------------------------------------------------