On Wed, 2007-12-05 at 19:00 -0500, Cory K. wrote: > Jonathan Leonard wrote: > > This was the first track I finished using Ubuntu Studio: > > > > http://www.jonathanleonard.com/songs/2007/mp3/reapers_wish.mp3 > > > > Thanks, > > > > jonathan adams leonard > > This comment is in now way a reflection on the quality of you work. :) > > Once, just once, I want to hear someone record a band using Ardour and > open-source tools. > > To me, all the synth stuff is just too easy as its all digital. > > If someone doesn't beat me to it, I for sure will be putting together a > system for recording _just_ live instruments. > > -Cory \m/ >
Here are three pieces recorded with live instruments and bands: http://www.nquit.com/Sounds/AaronTrumm/01Albums/Bleed/06AaronTrummWar.mp3 http://www.nquit.com/Sounds/AaronTrumm/02Singles/ApollosLastStandSingle/AaronTrummApollosLastStand.mp3 http://www.nquit.com/Sounds/AaronTrumm/03UnreleasedTracks/AaronTrummVoodooDaddyWithFullBandUnreleased.mp3 I was looking for stuff that I had done, but the technologies were so mixed on my live recordings, I couldn't be sure. These are definitely not new tools. We have been using Ardour to record live instruments and ensembles for at least three years. The guy featured in these mp3's, Aaron Trumm, has 6 commercial releases with all open source tools. Someone told me about a couple of big name releases that were done in Ardour, but I couldn't find confirmation. The fact is that the production team I work with has produced more music with open source tools in the last 4 years than we did individually and together for the previous 15 years. Larry Lines -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list Ubuntu-Studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users