On Sat, 24 Jan 2009 17:28:50 +0100 Andras Simon <szajmi@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 1/24/09, hollunder@xxxxxx <hollunder@xxxxxx> wrote: > > > Why don't you use rosegarden for recording if you already use it > > anyway? Hydrogen does jack transport and I think rosegarden does so > > as well. Or do I miss something? > > It's more likely that I do... I'm not sure I understand what you mean > by "recording". If you mean "press that red button in RG and start > playing", then well, yes, I do that in RG, and everything's fine > (usually). But after all the tracks are done (recorded), I'd like to > record (maybe this is wrong terminology; let's say "save") the > resulting audio as, say, a wav file, that one can listen to without > RG, hydrogen and all the synths being around. It's this that I have > problem with if there are more than one synths that are producing the > sounds for the tracks. > > Does jack transport help in this second step? > > Andras I think you should just look for audio export in rosegarden. It should be able to do it and rosegarden has rather good documentation available. If you already recorded everything into rosegarden (the audio out of hydrogen, the audio out of qsynth, ...) then you shouldn't need another app to get that into a wav file. Jack transport is for simultaneous playback/recording of different apps. You press one button and all jack transport enabled apps start to roll. Philipp _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user