Hallo, Dubphil hat gesagt: // Dubphil wrote: > Yesterday was my very first experience in live recording under Linux. > Everything was fine during the record : > I was just using this audio chain : > > Basicaly, with the help of jackd > I run TerminatorX connected to Ecasound > Ecasound is connected to AMS > AMS is connected to MuSE where I do the recording. I just wonder: Why don't you record in ecasound? I'd say, running MuSE just for recording could be a bit overkill. And ecasound is a really useful and stable recording software and also very configurable. > in another way, can we imagine a system like that : > > during the recording, a "hot key" could be assigned to split the > recording in a new file. So at the end we would have several files that > we could play on a playlist and work on it easily. > > This would be a great feature for people like me that have more a DJ > approach to the music than other traditional musicians. this splitting > should not of course give a gap beetween the file in order to keep the > continuity of the mix. But this can be resolve by pasting the files in a > sound editor just before the burning process or perhaps even during the > burning process. Although with the help of jack-transport it might be possible to do a sample-exact switching of soundfiles during recording, in this case I'd probably try to keep a bit of overlap between both files. That is, you could run two ecasounds and start recording in one, then stop recording in the other afterwards. Ciao -- Frank Barknecht _ ______footils.org__ _ __latest track: "scans" _ http://footils.org/cms/show/41