Yes...Yesss....Yassssssssssssssssssss! I didn't want to learn photoshop cause I don't want to deal with a license so I started using gimp and Inkscape. Making music with Linux just makes a lot of sense to me. Thank you.
I wish I knew about GIMP a decade ago… So far it’s everything I need. Maybe I should go learn Inkscape. Right now for vector drawing I use LibreOffice Draw (LibreOffice is a Microsoft Word-type productivity suite).
So glad to see this. This was the spirit of the internet and music during the early days. We all still benefit from MIDI being open source. Can you imagine if Apple created MIDI?? They would be jacking everyone for royalties just like their lightning connections. I am excited to learn Linux and get away from intrusive operating systems and corporate clouds meant to hack our data.
Linux user here. I wanted to learn how to create/compose music for my own (FOSS) games, and I was a bit intimidated about needing to get a second PC running Windows after viewing a lot of tutorials online. So glad someone is sharing their workflow/knowledge out there! People becoming accustomed to using professional software is THE biggest hurdle to people making the change to FOSS software, the only reason proprietary software is still ahead is because people are used to it. What I'd really like to see from you is a video where you show popular VSTs like reaktor and serum, and show/review several OSS alternatives. I think a title like free alternatives to Serum, or free alternatives to Reaktor would garner you a lot of clicks, and I want those videos from you since I like your style!
If there is one thing that I hate more than anything, it's the false belief people have that a certain DAW or plugin is what they need to make the music what they want. Nobody understands that it's all about workflow, and at the end of the day it's what you do with the tools that make you a good producer. I can confirm this when I decided to switch from Zyn to Serum for a few months, and I've noticed that the sounds I made with Serum were very similar to the ones I was making in Zyn, simply because my tastes and ideas haven't changed. So I'm glad you made this video just to let people know about this, since I'm in the exact same boat as you!
Zyn lacks of some features (eg. Wavetables). However, it's an awesome synthesizer (especially Zyn 3). Even though I have Serum, I prefer Zyn over it when it comes to creating pads :)
@@piotrromanowski2663 I've heard that general complaint about Zyn before, though under the hood Zyn's Add Synth and Pad Synth oscillators are more or less band limited wavetables. Could you link to an example of a Serum workflow which Zyn is missing out on?
Dear Miro252, I STRONGLY AGREE with you. Just to mention to that passage of FLstudio (in the video at 01:00 ), the "Bits & Hz definition" is COMPLETELY WRONG for serious mastering. It`s all about the quality and resolution of your master work that is to be down scaled to lower level data muxer.
A similar thing happens in all of music. People are always chasing tone, not realizing how much skill affects it. It doesn't matter if you buy the exact same guitar, amp, pedals, cables, etc as Van Halen, if you can't play that good, you'll never sound that good. I've fallen into the trap before too. I think for me, it was always trying to find shortcuts, so maybe that's what it is for others, idk, but it was a hard lesson and waste of time in the long run. Now that I'm actually putting in the work, I'm not a half-bad bass player, and getting better at music production with every track!
miro252 Learning this the hard way. I had a copy of Reason (given to me) on a MacBook (also a hand-me-down) - about as proprietary as you can get - which now sits in my closet with a dead battery and busted charger. To keep going I grabbed my Android phone and downloaded Walk Band - didn’t like it - and then MidSequer, which although basic, was so intuitive that I kept using it and I loved it. Now I have Aria Maestosa on a cheaper computer and I feel free. I’m studying music theory and after watching a tutorial video of LMMS am about to download it again after I gave up on it too quickly. (MidSequer and Aria Maestosa are both lightweight piano roll editors for MIDI songs. Neither are DAWs but hey, you can get songs with a melody, bassline, percussion, choice of 128 instruments, and more.)
Sure I've mentioned this elsewhere... One thing I strongly advocate as a Linux user (for music) is DONATING. Just throw a bit of coin at the pages of developers who create the (often rather glorious) Open Source software you use. This doesn't need to be a small fortune - literally the price of a basic cup of coffee at your local diner... Because if we all give a little bit, it has a habit of mounting up., Which means the development can continue! *Packs up soapbox*
And the coolest thing in Linux is that ALWAYS there is an easier way to do anything you want to do. It is a simple matter of exploring and playing with Linux.
If you look at most world-class engineers, their selection of plugins, tools, and effects are usually quite simple and universal. Those proprietary plugins you think you need are probably just unnecessary gimmicks anyway.
My view is that they only really matter when you're mixing/producing full-time+ and it becomes more about streamlining your workflow. I work in FL Studio and Reaper and primarily use stock plugins. They can't do everything the specialized plugins can, but with some time and creative thinking you can get 80% of the way there. I have time for that, but I understand someone who does this all day every day doesn't.
@@SeleDreamsthe filters and waveforms of VST Synthesizers are quite distinctive between hardware synthesizers and virtual emulators and newer modular ones like reaktor and Bitwig with its grid or additive synthesis in place of the subtractive method. Then there are the effects plugins can be epic in their creative process of affecting sound design and performance 🎭
@@EzyoMusic Yeah. I use Reaper and could possibly do anything on it's stock plugins. But most paid plugins in addition to "magic sound" offer more streamlined workflow.
Fantastic Speech! Great Chinese Transportation. I’m the friend of your translator. Watched this video, I decided to be your follower too! Thanks for everything you did for open source community 😄👍🏻
Chinese translate! Wow! Unfa translate that? I shared this video to Chinese REAPER user group. In this group, I'm the only one who use Linux in music production. Your video helps me a lot. Because of your video, some group member started to use zyn-funsion.
This looks like a quality channel! I'd like to see a video about selecting midi and outboard audio interface devices that integrate well with FOSS DAWs.
You are the most serious musician using Linux out there. Very inspiring material for all people (like me) using FOSS and Linux as main OS for music production. Greetings from Colombia.
2 Years later bro, and this is still spot on. Glad I stumbled upon this. Nice to see someone with a similar mindset regardless products being deceptively marketed when amazing, free alternatives are already existabt. You just gotta put the time in to understand them, and by doing so you it prepares you for future problem-solving, holistic understanding, and a better workflow. Cheers! Easy Subscribe :)
I'm glad someone like you is around and I hope I can eventually share similar tips with FOSS software. Going straight from Windows to Arch (yes Arch btw), it was quite freeing, but I do have some pains in that an old proprietary dongle loaded with a huge library of East West licenses are now totally useless for me unless I use a Windows burner PC. Some of the other proprietary tools might be there through WINE, but dongle DRMs nearly always break eventually. My first total freedom and realization was dropping Finale for Musescore. I thought the lack of Finale's Speedy Entry would be a problem until I realized Musescore's tools weren't using old bloat of a 15 year old hunk of software that still retains a beige windows 95 look even in 2016. Musescore worked better from the ground up, and lets you make the shortcuts rather than forcing you to go through several dialog boxes each time to just add a dynamic that isn't in your shortcut list... If anything though, UI is still the #1 thing that needs to be fixed in all DAWs. I'm hoping to see a minimalistic DAW first on Linux that finally simplifies the mess they have become, hoping it allows a smoother process from music sketching to the finished deliverable lossless flac (or still wav files, cause they still do good work) files.
If you have a strong computer, you can run those libraries in Windows inside virtual box and use audiogridder to route signals to your host, it works well actually. I have some stuff from VSL than I don't want to dump, so even the iLokManager can run inside of Virtual Box. Or use a slave PC with audiogridder.
In linux you can modify and or compile the kernel with low latency, that is a thing that is possible just on linux and is a big pro compared to other OS.
Im starting up a business right now and i have so far not needed windows or Proprietary Software, mainly because of costs and familiarity. Software is one of those huge money sinks that can often be a roadblock. Blender for example is a godsend. I am able to produce extremely high quality VFX for presentations or lifelike 3D animations with a cheap camera, a Greenscreen and Blender. Also i do not have the money to either hire an artist for background music or licensing existing tracks. So i do them myself. However there can be a very steep learning curve behind those programs. It took me about half a year to master blender. Still it gives you so much more creative freedom. With Music making i am still very much a beginner So im looking forward to more in-depth tutorials.
Just switched to pop Os because many people say it's beginner friendly Linux and it's amazing, managed to run Ableton through wine and it just works , also want i to try bitwig which is not open source but still. It's so amazing how smooth Linux is, everything is opening instantly, websites are loading immediately, no telemetry, no useless bloat eating system memory, great workflow, great design and completely free. Love it!
Thanks man. You're like... The only person I could find on youtube (somehow) who's actually explained what the state of play is for edm production on Linux!
As a Blender user, your statement touched my heart. I know, Blender is a perfect, complete 3D program, that's all you need. Especially since it has changed a lot, evolved enormously. But do you know why I'm here? I want to make 3D movies by myself and I realized that I have to make my own songs. And here I am, hoping to find the equivalent of Blender but in audio editing and DAW.
Great! I think the closest we have to an "audio Blender" is Ardour. I have a playlist of videos teaching it from a quickstart to an in-depth MIDI masteclass. Just search for "unfa Ardour Course" and you'll find it.
Homie, it wld be hard to overstate how revolutionary your work is here. These are the channels by artists who should be rewarded by the platform hosting their work. Exceptional undeniable educational value with true hacker DNA ensuring open source innovators are at the forefront. xo ❤
Great vid, love that you have all the links to all the stuff in the description, one thing tho: LMMS is specifically designed to not work on Linux (despite the name being literally Linux MultiMedia Studio) as it does NOT run native Linux VSTs.
LMMS is generally lacking sensible plug-in support. The only supported effects are LADSPA, which is an ancient, very limited format. Windows VSTs are only usable as instruments via the VeSTige instrument, and to compensate for it's shortcomings it ships with built-in LADSPA plugins, with for example modified Calf Compressor that has an extra control to make it possible to do sidechain compression. It gets the job done, but I wouldn't recommend it as the most versatile... sequencer? It's hard to call it a DAW when it has no means of recording or editing audio, but I guess the meaning of the word has shifted, so let's call it a DAW :)
Hey Unfa thank you for making this channel, i have been using Linux & Open source software for quite a few years now, and have always got music in my mind that i cannot replicate outside my brain-case. I have learned 3d modelling with Blender, 2d art with Gimp and Programming in Linux but for multiple reasons i have been long put off Music one main reason is until my friend showed me "Royalty free" license yesterday and explained a lot about music licensing i for some reason couldn't get wrap my mind around it and so ended up with endless anxiety as i don't want to screw over an artist, get in trouble or anything and i don't really like complex licenses, subscription models or the like as it all fork bombs my brain. I just bought humble bundles Loop-crate bundle with tons of royalty free loops by soundtrack loops and included a "Mixcraft" and well cant use that on my Linux unless i use wine so i searched for open source Linux alternatives and stumbled upon your channel i feel super lucky and statically charged to have found youI will definitely try LMMS and Ardour and cant wait to get stuck in, i have skimmed over your library of videos and i really think your going to be the one that finally helps me get into Music production! So once again THANK YOU so much for making this channel! i hope to learn a lot from you Unfa-Sensei!
Just found your videos on Ardour, and came from the official Ardour channel. I had no idea that the open source alternatives had come along so far! And how do you only have 8k subscribers? You videos are fantastic and really showcase what's beneat the surface.
this is interesting, makes me want to explore more ways of making music outside of my cozy box of FL Studio and VSTs such as serum. . .maybe i will explore. . .thanks for opening up my mind to new possibilities!
So I had the same issue with kxstudio. I now use ubuntu studio with kcal repos and I installed plasma 5 as my de. You can backport the neon development. I am running kde 5.17.2 with UB studio and kxstudio repos enabled. Tracktion waveform 9 as my DAW. THIS SETUP ROCKS!
Just started going slowly full open-source and collaborative softwares... So i repurposed my old laptop and installed Ubuntu... And now i discover there are artistic oriented flavours ?????? Damn man thank u so fkin much I will delve into all that good stuff right now and finally enjoy music without feeling illegal or poor. Thank u!
I am really happy that some one is truely promoting such a free and open knowledge most people don't know of, I have been using open source tools for as long as 6 years..And I have become accustomed to the resources and quality provided by the Great community. I want to make a request"please contribute as much as possible, I am not saying just about fina ncial but, help in building, Improving ,& maintaining these incredible tools."
IMO The most important part of this video starts at 04:43. Being able to use free software does NOT exclude you from your responsibilities. It is just not forced in anyways, like paying for it. Maybe you are not a developer but as a user/artist, you can help the community sharing your knowledge or experience with developers or with users, just like Unfa.
Yes, being a part of the community - we are free to profit from the software, but we're also responsible for it's development and growth. The developers need our help and financial support. Even if they don't force us to pay. We owe them.
Thankyou Unfa, You explained it all simply and clearly. I use FOSS on my PC and like to use Ardour, lots of plug ins and softsynths. LINUX is an excellent platform for lots of things, Music, Film Production, CGI etc......You have convinced me to use LINUX and hopefully lots of others.. Another great video Unfa, Thankyou so much.
nice video master Unfa :D I have been you apprentice for more that half a year, I'm deeply thankful for all the knowledge about music production on linux you transferred, as soon as DAWs and synths on linux create feature of curving automation lines linux will become ready for super professional music production, well to be honest you can do it already in pure data but you have to work it out pretty hard and you need good mathematical background :)
Thank you! I'm glad my work is of value to you! I'd love to have curved automation in Ardour, though I've grown to manage without it, and I actually forget I need that.
Love your videos! Because of your videos I took the chance on Linux after many years of using mac. Linux was SO much easier than I thought it would be. And I really don't miss anything, thanks to info from your videos. Also, going linux was also a creative boost for me, discovering new possibilities in music production et cetera.
I have composed and produced my first piano concerto with rosegarden, the alsa sound server and a couple of good sound fonts. I also realized a video to publish it on my UA-cam channel with imagination a tool to make sounding presentations and finally I am editing full orchestral score and parts with lilypond, the Swiss knife of the musical score. All. With open source software, all in my Linux box.
I love you, you magnificent long haired, goatee electronic music man. Linux and FLOSS are slowly becoming better for more and more types of workflow, soon (hopefully) even the gamers won't have reason to complain.
I am so happy to hear you speak about open source with such passion!!! The Mac and PC's have too much crap in the OS - So many things running in the background screwing you up and you are always in the cloud! I want a super powerful computer for audio and I can't seem tp make that happen with Mac or PC.
Mark Griskey PC stands for personal computer. You better always say Micro$oft Windows when you mean it since wording influences how people conceive stuff.
Wine has recently really increased its potent since I remember first needing to go through a lot of trouble to try if something works on wine and after that hope it even works on wine. now it is just opening terminal go to the executable directory, and just type "wine program name" and almost everything works directly.
Of course, you can still purchase stuff you like, enjoy using and want to support. I happen to love Reaper and FL, they work very well for what I do and how I prefer to do it. I appreciate what they're doing so I choose to (still) use and support them.
I absolutely agree with all you have said. I’m not a music producer but as a graphic designer we face the same issues. Maybe is not as notorious in the graphic design industry , but I remember few decades the idea was that “Mac OS is for graphic designers “ that idea has been washing out through the years and know we have a lot of designers using open source as myself. Yes the learning curve is very long but at the end you learned to design in whatever environment you are. Also I save thousands of money in projects because I have no longer to pay for subscriptions. I believe that is still a long way for the open source software to compete with proprietary software but that doesn’t means that is imposible to do the same work in open source software, is just that isn’t fancy at the moment. I feel free of adobe shits and that is something money can pay. Having my own environment where I can tweak it as much I want with my own tastes that accelerates my workflow , that’s something that I’ve learned that no money in the world can buy. GO ON OPEN SOURCE! and great video my friend.
Hello. I have a question. Is it better for a beginner to start out with a distro such as unbuntu studio to get an all in one approach, or is it better to get something like ubuntu mint and add software later? Thanks for the videos!
I personally learned a lot about available software from Ubuntu Studio, I think it's a good path for beginners, as it's easiest to see what is there. AVLinux seems to be a great option too.
It's true that some tasks and processes can only be achieved with specific VST plugins like Soothe and Spiff. Finding exact replicas of these plugins is often impossible. If I were confident I could run these plugins on a Linux system, I would love to switch to Linux. But I guess that's not possible, right?
You don't even realize how important you are to the free software community. Software's greatest goal is to have a userbase, so users are equally important as developers. And now we can say "look, unfa makes music using this software". That proves that free/open source software is usable. The quality of free software is going to grow, its userbase as well. Thanks to you.
Which distribution do you use for music production? Do you also do any live recording? I am thinking I'd start with linux mint (since I use that anyway) I have tried av linux too but I get confused with jack. But it has so many plugins. ...
As for live recording - I used to record some live concerts with KX Studio Live USB, Ardour 4 and Behringer X42 or XR18 mixers in a local church. I also do monthly live streams on this channel.
If you're coming from Windows, you can't go wrong with Ubuntu or Mint to start. Once you get to grips with Linux, you'll likely move to other distributions, maybe ones with rolling releases, but that is a long way off for someone starting out.
Wow! What a powerful video! I am impressed with your talent, and I thank you for your generosity in sharing your knowledge with the world! I am increasingly convinced of the potential of the Linux universe! Greetings from Brazil! 👏👏👏
Very true words! I'm agree with you. I've changed my workflow over the years more and more from M$ Windows to LINUX. Why did I that? The operating system is transparent. It's much more secure than the commerial ones. It's much more stable and performant than the one from Redmond. It's more flexible: You can choose between a bunch of distributions and a bunch of desktop environments. No problem with licences - It's free (FOSS) I can handle my complete workflows without any defeats in comaprison to Windows. And I use it for a lot of my work: * Doing all office jobs. * Make and produce music * Image and video editing and... and... and... Conclusion: LINUX is a very recommendable operating system!
4:19 Where is this version of the Free Software Song? I couldn't find it on the official song page in the description. I listened to all ones not described as rock but none of them were it.
I have yet to find an open source Synthesizer that is in any way comparable to something like Massive, Sytrus, or Serum. The closest thing is Alpha plus 2 but it's still very limited in comparison.
I've never heard of Alpha Plus 2! Two open-source powerhouse synths I know are Zyn-Fusion and Surge. Have you tried these? They may not look as impressive at first, but they are mighty powerful. I've made a lot of videos about Zyn-Fusion (and ZynAddSubFX). Massive honestly is quite limited IMO. I think it's appeal is based mostly on the wavetables supplied, but you can't make your own ones. And I personally don't like using presets :D
I've checked Alpha Plus 2 - it's not open-source - it's freeware(not to be confused with free software - I know, it's confusing) and it only runs (natively) on Windows.
I already use mostly open source software(godot, blender, manjaro linux etc). Once in awhile, I boot on my Windows 10 partition, to play around with FL studio, or play games. I'm definitely going to check for FL studio alternatives, and maybe one day, I don't need my Windows 10 partition at all.
Computers are so ubiquitous now, that way more people stumble into programming as either a hobby or career, boosting the the total number of developers existing, thus increasing the total number of developers working on open source projects. So, I think you are absolutely right: open source could soon dominate closed. I've been running a pure Linux environment for over a year now and have not missed Windows for even one minute. It''s unimaginably liberating. I am sticking with REAPER, though, as it is badass and I already owned it, but I think i'm 99% open source now. Gentoo FTW!
I really appreciate this video, FL studio is really the only thing keeping me tied to windows in any way. I've got a new ssd on the way for a fresh Linux install and I'm excited to try some of these DAWs
Hi unfa! Thank to you and your videos I am a new linux music "producer".. After my macbook stopped working I bought an huawei laptop for budget reasons (I can't and I don't want to spend money for a mac anymore).. I don't like windows at all so I started searching for something different. After watching your videos about ardour I installed ubuntu studio and started using ardour with Jack and some plugins. It's so funny and... composing simple pop punk songs with drumgizmo, a midi bass and of course my guitar is really easy. I don't miss garageband and other simple Mac tools for now :) thank you for sharing your knowledge.
0:21 - I am. For nearly 9 years, the last 3 of which linux only, I kicked Windows in its rear end permanently and converted all of my storages to XFS. 5:40 - is the "Join us now" song yours?
Been using Linux as my main distro for years now, but I know nothing about music production so I'm subbing just to learn a bit. Will you be covering Pipewire ?
@@unfa00 Pipewire is the future, it does what Jack does for audio and video, it's impressive now, but not really useable. Trust me, when people can remove Jack and Pulse and just have Pipewire, things will be much much more slick and generally, better.
I'm with you all the way. I didn't even start to use computers for music production until I realized I could run Ardour on a 10 year old laptop and successfully use it for music production.
Good commentary. As a community we ( in the Linux ecosystem ) number among the minority of computer users. And yet that is evolving - if only gradually.
I can only fully approve your idea. I'm a 12 (at least...) years very very happy Linux user...for everything! many many thanks UNFA for your share! GOOOOOD MUSIC!
Unfa Well Done! But open source (ex: Linux) is another means/tool towards greater/more-important ends. You know electronic music & I'm clueless but definitely would like to pick-up the skill. ?Which of your playlists can a clomplete newbie like me use to learn electronic music composition, recording, production, etc, etc?? Oh, I just got a HP Z2 Mini G4 workstation with all the bells/whistles & will load Ubuntu Studio on it.
HI thanks for this video, I am 69 years old and you have inspired me to make some music, I hope I can learn how to use all these platforms, I just got my first Linux computer and I am loving it😍
Awesome! If you'd have any questions or trouble, remember that you can join my community chat and get help there! chat unfa XYZ We have a wonderful community and I probably learn more from them than they learn from me at this point :)
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux. Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX. Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called "Linux", and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project. There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called "Linux" distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux.
Learning to use some linux software can be a bit harder than big name things, but with videos like this or other youtube content creators focusing on linux education for this software will be alot better.
Ubuntu studio checking in here. :D I started with Ubuntu many moons ago when I was getting into virtual pipe organs and I use it for everything now. the last commercial OS I used was Windows NT. The trajectory does look quite favorable of late. The biggest expense (other than the computer itself) is going to be getting good multi channel output devices.
Agree 100% I do art and coding and use Linux and OpenSource software only as well... it is a way of life and deeper than just a software choice is about freedom and do not be complacent with big companies!!
Hey. Just wondering what the best workflow/tools are to do live looping like, say, Reggie Watts did in his TED video. I have a midi player, and a midi drum pad, and a USB mic.
Yes...Yesss....Yassssssssssssssssssss! I didn't want to learn photoshop cause I don't want to deal with a license so I started using gimp and Inkscape. Making music with Linux just makes a lot of sense to me. Thank you.
Me too. I stopped using Photoshop and now, i'm just using gimp that is enough for my needs. I think can be the same with e-music!
Inkscape is amazing, gimp is good, but as good as photoshoo?l, but you can still work with it
I love Inkscape! Great vector graphics program.
Look at krita ;)
I wish I knew about GIMP a decade ago… So far it’s everything I need. Maybe I should go learn Inkscape. Right now for vector drawing I use LibreOffice Draw (LibreOffice is a Microsoft Word-type productivity suite).
4 years later: i can clearly say that yup open-source is the future.
So glad to see this. This was the spirit of the internet and music during the early days. We all still benefit from MIDI being open source. Can you imagine if Apple created MIDI?? They would be jacking everyone for royalties just like their lightning connections. I am excited to learn Linux and get away from intrusive operating systems and corporate clouds meant to hack our data.
Hack our data?! No. They hack… our L I V E S. Our livelihoods… USING our data.
How the hell have I not found your channel until now?!?! Linux and audio work all rolled into one channel... THIS IS WHAT I NEED
Linux user here.
I wanted to learn how to create/compose music for my own (FOSS) games, and I was a bit intimidated about needing to get a second PC running Windows after viewing a lot of tutorials online.
So glad someone is sharing their workflow/knowledge out there! People becoming accustomed to using professional software is THE biggest hurdle to people making the change to FOSS software, the only reason proprietary software is still ahead is because people are used to it.
What I'd really like to see from you is a video where you show popular VSTs like reaktor and serum, and show/review several OSS alternatives.
I think a title like free alternatives to Serum, or free alternatives to Reaktor would garner you a lot of clicks, and I want those videos from you since I like your style!
Thank you! When Vital is out I can start talking about free Serum alternatives - until then, not so much ;)
@@unfa00 out yet?
@@SabzAndMasenko-TheKitchen Yeah, VItal has been released over a year ago now :)
If there is one thing that I hate more than anything, it's the false belief people have that a certain DAW or plugin is what they need to make the music what they want. Nobody understands that it's all about workflow, and at the end of the day it's what you do with the tools that make you a good producer. I can confirm this when I decided to switch from Zyn to Serum for a few months, and I've noticed that the sounds I made with Serum were very similar to the ones I was making in Zyn, simply because my tastes and ideas haven't changed. So I'm glad you made this video just to let people know about this, since I'm in the exact same boat as you!
Zyn lacks of some features (eg. Wavetables). However, it's an awesome synthesizer (especially Zyn 3). Even though I have Serum, I prefer Zyn over it when it comes to creating pads :)
@@piotrromanowski2663 I've heard that general complaint about Zyn before, though under the hood Zyn's Add Synth and Pad Synth oscillators are more or less band limited wavetables. Could you link to an example of a Serum workflow which Zyn is missing out on?
Dear Miro252, I STRONGLY AGREE with you. Just to mention to that passage of FLstudio (in the video at 01:00 ), the "Bits & Hz definition" is COMPLETELY WRONG for serious mastering.
It`s all about the quality and resolution of your master work that is to be down scaled to lower level data muxer.
A similar thing happens in all of music. People are always chasing tone, not realizing how much skill affects it. It doesn't matter if you buy the exact same guitar, amp, pedals, cables, etc as Van Halen, if you can't play that good, you'll never sound that good. I've fallen into the trap before too. I think for me, it was always trying to find shortcuts, so maybe that's what it is for others, idk, but it was a hard lesson and waste of time in the long run. Now that I'm actually putting in the work, I'm not a half-bad bass player, and getting better at music production with every track!
miro252 Learning this the hard way. I had a copy of Reason (given to me) on a MacBook (also a hand-me-down) - about as proprietary as you can get - which now sits in my closet with a dead battery and busted charger. To keep going I grabbed my Android phone and downloaded Walk Band - didn’t like it - and then MidSequer, which although basic, was so intuitive that I kept using it and I loved it. Now I have Aria Maestosa on a cheaper computer and I feel free. I’m studying music theory and after watching a tutorial video of LMMS am about to download it again after I gave up on it too quickly.
(MidSequer and Aria Maestosa are both lightweight piano roll editors for MIDI songs. Neither are DAWs but hey, you can get songs with a melody, bassline, percussion, choice of 128 instruments, and more.)
Sure I've mentioned this elsewhere... One thing I strongly advocate as a Linux user (for music) is DONATING.
Just throw a bit of coin at the pages of developers who create the (often rather glorious) Open Source software you use.
This doesn't need to be a small fortune - literally the price of a basic cup of coffee at your local diner...
Because if we all give a little bit, it has a habit of mounting up., Which means the development can continue!
*Packs up soapbox*
My Linux system is the best computer I've ever had. I have more debugging to do, but solutions are usually out there on Linux forums.
Linux 🤢
And the coolest thing in Linux is that ALWAYS there is an easier way to do anything you want to do. It is a simple matter of exploring and playing with Linux.
If you look at most world-class engineers, their selection of plugins, tools, and effects are usually quite simple and universal. Those proprietary plugins you think you need are probably just unnecessary gimmicks anyway.
My view is that they only really matter when you're mixing/producing full-time+ and it becomes more about streamlining your workflow. I work in FL Studio and Reaper and primarily use stock plugins. They can't do everything the specialized plugins can, but with some time and creative thinking you can get 80% of the way there. I have time for that, but I understand someone who does this all day every day doesn't.
I'd say when it comes to synths yes, it becomes a bit more complex for sampled instruments like orchestral libraries
@@SeleDreamsthe filters and waveforms of VST Synthesizers are quite distinctive between hardware synthesizers and virtual emulators and newer modular ones like reaktor and Bitwig with its grid or additive synthesis in place of the subtractive method. Then there are the effects plugins can be epic in their creative process of affecting sound design and performance 🎭
@@EzyoMusic Yeah. I use Reaper and could possibly do anything on it's stock plugins. But most paid plugins in addition to "magic sound" offer more streamlined workflow.
Fantastic Speech! Great Chinese Transportation. I’m the friend of your translator. Watched this video, I decided to be your follower too! Thanks for everything you did for open source community 😄👍🏻
Chinese translate! Wow! Unfa translate that? I shared this video to Chinese REAPER user group. In this group, I'm the only one who use Linux in music production. Your video helps me a lot. Because of your video, some group member started to use zyn-funsion.
That translation was contributed by a viewer! I'm glad my videos are helpful! Good luck :)
This looks like a quality channel! I'd like to see a video about selecting midi and outboard audio interface devices that integrate well with FOSS DAWs.
You are the most serious musician using Linux out there. Very inspiring material for all people (like me) using FOSS and Linux as main OS for music production.
Greetings from Colombia.
lol
spaghetti nunchaku what’s the funny part in it ?
@@spaghettinunchaku3942 what’s the funny part in it ? [2]
2 Years later bro, and this is still spot on. Glad I stumbled upon this.
Nice to see someone with a similar mindset regardless products being deceptively marketed when amazing, free alternatives are already existabt. You just gotta put the time in to understand them, and by doing so you it prepares you for future problem-solving, holistic understanding, and a better workflow.
Cheers! Easy Subscribe :)
I'm glad someone like you is around and I hope I can eventually share similar tips with FOSS software. Going straight from Windows to Arch (yes Arch btw), it was quite freeing, but I do have some pains in that an old proprietary dongle loaded with a huge library of East West licenses are now totally useless for me unless I use a Windows burner PC. Some of the other proprietary tools might be there through WINE, but dongle DRMs nearly always break eventually.
My first total freedom and realization was dropping Finale for Musescore. I thought the lack of Finale's Speedy Entry would be a problem until I realized Musescore's tools weren't using old bloat of a 15 year old hunk of software that still retains a beige windows 95 look even in 2016. Musescore worked better from the ground up, and lets you make the shortcuts rather than forcing you to go through several dialog boxes each time to just add a dynamic that isn't in your shortcut list...
If anything though, UI is still the #1 thing that needs to be fixed in all DAWs. I'm hoping to see a minimalistic DAW first on Linux that finally simplifies the mess they have become, hoping it allows a smoother process from music sketching to the finished deliverable lossless flac (or still wav files, cause they still do good work) files.
If you have a strong computer, you can run those libraries in Windows inside virtual box and use audiogridder to route signals to your host, it works well actually. I have some stuff from VSL than I don't want to dump, so even the iLokManager can run inside of Virtual Box. Or use a slave PC with audiogridder.
@@spunicunifait2697 I'll probably keep that in mind. If I do more full digital audio, I'm probably going to dedicate a machine to it.
In linux you can modify and or compile the kernel with low latency, that is a thing that is possible just on linux and is a big pro compared to other OS.
Im starting up a business right now and i have so far not needed windows or Proprietary Software, mainly because of costs and familiarity. Software is one of those huge money sinks that can often be a roadblock. Blender for example is a godsend. I am able to produce extremely high quality VFX for presentations or lifelike 3D animations with a cheap camera, a Greenscreen and Blender. Also i do not have the money to either hire an artist for background music or licensing existing tracks. So i do them myself. However there can be a very steep learning curve behind those programs. It took me about half a year to master blender. Still it gives you so much more creative freedom. With Music making i am still very much a beginner So im looking forward to more in-depth tutorials.
Amen brother. Open source is the way forward. Also, kudos for running KDE instead of the default Gnome that comes with most distros :)
I find KDE Plasma to be a great desktop environment that both looks and functions great :)
Burh not every distro uses gnome
Of course not, but it's pretty common.
Just switched to pop Os because many people say it's beginner friendly Linux and it's amazing, managed to run Ableton through wine and it just works , also want i to try bitwig which is not open source but still. It's so amazing how smooth Linux is, everything is opening instantly, websites are loading immediately, no telemetry, no useless bloat eating system memory, great workflow, great design and completely free. Love it!
Thanks man. You're like... The only person I could find on youtube (somehow) who's actually explained what the state of play is for edm production on Linux!
You're welcome! You can check my latest single "Crowbar" to hear what I was able to do with 100% open-source software and Linux :)
@@unfa00 Excited to do so!
As a Blender user, your statement touched my heart. I know, Blender is a perfect, complete 3D program, that's all you need. Especially since it has changed a lot, evolved enormously. But do you know why I'm here? I want to make 3D movies by myself and I realized that I have to make my own songs. And here I am, hoping to find the equivalent of Blender but in audio editing and DAW.
Great! I think the closest we have to an "audio Blender" is Ardour. I have a playlist of videos teaching it from a quickstart to an in-depth MIDI masteclass. Just search for "unfa Ardour Course" and you'll find it.
KDE NEON user here... an avid Linux user for years and new to music production but grateful to have found your channel
Welcome, and thanks! :)
Homie, it wld be hard to overstate how revolutionary your work is here. These are the channels by artists who should be rewarded by the platform hosting their work. Exceptional undeniable educational value with true hacker DNA ensuring open source innovators are at the forefront. xo ❤
I agreed " Open source software is the right way to go"
thx for putting chinese subtitle !
very kind of u :)
Thanks!
The subtitles were contributed by the viewers!
Great vid, love that you have all the links to all the stuff in the description, one thing tho: LMMS is specifically designed to not work on Linux (despite the name being literally Linux MultiMedia Studio) as it does NOT run native Linux VSTs.
LMMS is generally lacking sensible plug-in support. The only supported effects are LADSPA, which is an ancient, very limited format. Windows VSTs are only usable as instruments via the VeSTige instrument, and to compensate for it's shortcomings it ships with built-in LADSPA plugins, with for example modified Calf Compressor that has an extra control to make it possible to do sidechain compression. It gets the job done, but I wouldn't recommend it as the most versatile... sequencer? It's hard to call it a DAW when it has no means of recording or editing audio, but I guess the meaning of the word has shifted, so let's call it a DAW :)
Hey Unfa thank you for making this channel, i have been using Linux & Open source software for quite a few years now, and have always got music in my mind that i cannot replicate outside my brain-case. I have learned 3d modelling with Blender, 2d art with Gimp and Programming in Linux but for multiple reasons i have been long put off Music one main reason is until my friend showed me "Royalty free" license yesterday and explained a lot about music licensing i for some reason couldn't get wrap my mind around it and so ended up with endless anxiety as i don't want to screw over an artist, get in trouble or anything and i don't really like complex licenses, subscription models or the like as it all fork bombs my brain.
I just bought humble bundles Loop-crate bundle with tons of royalty free loops by soundtrack loops and included a "Mixcraft" and well cant use that on my Linux unless i use wine so i searched for open source Linux alternatives and stumbled upon your channel i feel super lucky and statically charged to have found youI will definitely try LMMS and Ardour and cant wait to get stuck in, i have skimmed over your library of videos and i really think your going to be the one that finally helps me get into Music production!
So once again THANK YOU so much for making this channel! i hope to learn a lot from you Unfa-Sensei!
Just found your videos on Ardour, and came from the official Ardour channel. I had no idea that the open source alternatives had come along so far! And how do you only have 8k subscribers? You videos are fantastic and really showcase what's beneat the surface.
Thank you! I guess not that many people know they even want to find out about this stuff :) But it's slowly changing!
this is interesting, makes me want to explore more ways of making music outside of my cozy box of FL Studio and VSTs such as serum. . .maybe i will explore. . .thanks for opening up my mind to new possibilities!
So I had the same issue with kxstudio. I now use ubuntu studio with kcal repos and I installed plasma 5 as my de. You can backport the neon development. I am running kde 5.17.2 with UB studio and kxstudio repos enabled. Tracktion waveform 9 as my DAW. THIS SETUP ROCKS!
Lovely....proud of you man. We need more of your Kind. Looking at setting up and Open Source Studio is Nigeria for Africa.
Just started going slowly full open-source and collaborative softwares... So i repurposed my old laptop and installed Ubuntu...
And now i discover there are artistic oriented flavours ?????? Damn man thank u so fkin much
I will delve into all that good stuff right now and finally enjoy music without feeling illegal or poor.
Thank u!
I’ve been using this philosophy in the last few months and my output has been better than ever! So I agree with you wholeheartedly
I am really happy that some one is truely promoting such a free and open knowledge most people don't know of, I have been using open source tools for as long as 6 years..And I have become accustomed to the resources and quality provided by the Great community. I want to make a request"please contribute as much as possible, I am not saying just about fina
ncial but, help in building, Improving ,& maintaining these incredible tools."
Beautiful message
Ah! I've seen a couple of your videos but wasn't aware that you're a Linux user too. This is awesome dude!
Thanks! I am :) Linux 4 Life!
Yes, yes, indeed! It's all about the freedom. Thanks for sharing this.
There aren't many who can get me to subscribe with only one video... Great work!
Buddy, it’s 2024. Freedom no longer exists
Condescending tone is just for comedic effect. I do appreciate this content 👏
IMO The most important part of this video starts at 04:43. Being able to use free software does NOT exclude you from your responsibilities. It is just not forced in anyways, like paying for it.
Maybe you are not a developer but as a user/artist, you can help the community sharing your knowledge or experience with developers or with users, just like Unfa.
Yes, being a part of the community - we are free to profit from the software, but we're also responsible for it's development and growth. The developers need our help and financial support. Even if they don't force us to pay. We owe them.
Thankyou Unfa, You explained it all simply and clearly. I use FOSS on my PC and like to use Ardour, lots of plug ins and softsynths. LINUX is an excellent platform for lots of things, Music, Film Production, CGI etc......You have convinced me to use LINUX and hopefully lots of others.. Another great video Unfa, Thankyou so much.
I am curious why I never found your channel. Making music with linux is one of my main-topics in my blog, too. This is too cool. :)
The Internet is an ocean, and I'm just a tiny drop in it :) Nice to meet you!
@@unfa00 I just made this "talk" in 2018. :) Same topic. ua-cam.com/video/Xa9vzb4PUnM/v-deo.html&t=
nice video master Unfa :D I have been you apprentice for more that half a year, I'm deeply thankful for all the knowledge about music production on linux you transferred, as soon as DAWs and synths on linux create feature of curving automation lines linux will become ready for super professional music production, well to be honest you can do it already in pure data but you have to work it out pretty hard and you need good mathematical background :)
Thank you! I'm glad my work is of value to you! I'd love to have curved automation in Ardour, though I've grown to manage without it, and I actually forget I need that.
Stallman would be moderately pleased with this video.
Love your videos! Because of your videos I took the chance on Linux after many years of using mac. Linux was SO much easier than I thought it would be. And I really don't miss anything, thanks to info from your videos.
Also, going linux was also a creative boost for me, discovering new possibilities in music production et cetera.
I have composed and produced my first piano concerto with rosegarden, the alsa sound server and a couple of good sound fonts. I also realized a video to publish it on my UA-cam channel with imagination a tool to make sounding presentations and finally I am editing full orchestral score and parts with lilypond, the Swiss knife of the musical score. All. With open source software, all in my Linux box.
I love you, you magnificent long haired, goatee electronic music man.
Linux and FLOSS are slowly becoming better for more and more types of workflow, soon (hopefully) even the gamers won't have reason to complain.
Your message is so passionate. I love it.
que persona ejemplar mister!! saludos y fuerza desde Argentina. Software libre para un mundo de paz equidad y libertad.
I am so happy to hear you speak about open source with such passion!!! The Mac and PC's have too much crap in the OS - So many things running in the background screwing you up and you are always in the cloud! I want a super powerful computer for audio and I can't seem tp make that happen with Mac or PC.
You're welcome! I've seen you've pledged to my Patreon - thank you! :)
Mark Griskey PC stands for personal computer. You better always say Micro$oft Windows when you mean it since wording influences how people conceive stuff.
Whats similar to Ableton but free?
Wine has recently really increased its potent since I remember first needing to go through a lot of trouble to try if something works on wine and after that hope it even works on wine. now it is just opening terminal go to the executable directory, and just type "wine program name" and almost everything works directly.
I am very pleased of having found this video.
Of course, you can still purchase stuff you like, enjoy using and want to support. I happen to love Reaper and FL, they work very well for what I do and how I prefer to do it. I appreciate what they're doing so I choose to (still) use and support them.
I recently switched to Linux for Desktop use. Been using it for Server purposes for years.
Fun times ahead.
I absolutely agree with all you have said. I’m not a music producer but as a graphic designer we face the same issues. Maybe is not as notorious in the graphic design industry , but I remember few decades the idea was that “Mac OS is for graphic designers “ that idea has been washing out through the years and know we have a lot of designers using open source as myself. Yes the learning curve is very long but at the end you learned to design in whatever environment you are. Also I save thousands of money in projects because I have no longer to pay for subscriptions. I believe that is still a long way for the open source software to compete with proprietary software but that doesn’t means that is imposible to do the same work in open source software, is just that isn’t fancy at the moment. I feel free of adobe shits and that is something money can pay. Having my own environment where I can tweak it as much I want with my own tastes that accelerates my workflow , that’s something that I’ve learned that no money in the world can buy. GO ON OPEN SOURCE! and great video my friend.
Hello. I have a question. Is it better for a beginner to start out with a distro such as unbuntu studio to get an all in one approach, or is it better to get something like ubuntu mint and add software later? Thanks for the videos!
I personally learned a lot about available software from Ubuntu Studio, I think it's a good path for beginners, as it's easiest to see what is there. AVLinux seems to be a great option too.
FFS this was 5 years ago? So ahead of it's time!
I'm on Linux for over a decade now and don't regret it a bit.
was just wanting to look into open source options for music production software and subbed from the intro alone :)
That's right unfa. Open-source does make the world a better place! *** Join us now and share the software ***
It's true that some tasks and processes can only be achieved with specific VST plugins like Soothe and Spiff. Finding exact replicas of these plugins is often impossible. If I were confident I could run these plugins on a Linux system, I would love to switch to Linux. But I guess that's not possible, right?
You don't even realize how important you are to the free software community. Software's greatest goal is to have a userbase, so users are equally important as developers. And now we can say "look, unfa makes music using this software". That proves that free/open source software is usable. The quality of free software is going to grow, its userbase as well. Thanks to you.
Thank you so much for this! That's exactly what I want to show to the world with my music (and videos!).
Which distribution do you use for music production? Do you also do any live recording?
I am thinking I'd start with linux mint (since I use that anyway) I have tried av linux too but I get confused with jack. But it has so many plugins. ...
I currently use Linux Mint 18.3 with KDE5 and KX Studio repositories.
As for live recording - I used to record some live concerts with KX Studio Live USB, Ardour 4 and Behringer X42 or XR18 mixers in a local church.
I also do monthly live streams on this channel.
@@unfa00 thanks for the reply! I get confused with so many options
If you're coming from Windows, you can't go wrong with Ubuntu or Mint to start. Once you get to grips with Linux, you'll likely move to other distributions, maybe ones with rolling releases, but that is a long way off for someone starting out.
Ubuntu studio
PSA: Don't use Balena Etcher. It's been found to have telemetry and first-party ads.
Wow! What a powerful video! I am impressed with your talent, and I thank you for your generosity in sharing your knowledge with the world! I am increasingly convinced of the potential of the Linux universe! Greetings from Brazil! 👏👏👏
Very true words! I'm agree with you.
I've changed my workflow over the years more and more from M$ Windows to LINUX.
Why did I that?
The operating system is transparent.
It's much more secure than the commerial ones.
It's much more stable and performant than the one from Redmond.
It's more flexible: You can choose between a bunch of distributions and a bunch of desktop environments.
No problem with licences - It's free (FOSS)
I can handle my complete workflows without any defeats in comaprison to Windows.
And I use it for a lot of my work:
* Doing all office jobs.
* Make and produce music
* Image and video editing
and... and... and...
Conclusion: LINUX is a very recommendable operating system!
Why in the heck after years of looking for videos like this, I only found it today by accident?
4:19 Where is this version of the Free Software Song? I couldn't find it on the official song page in the description. I listened to all ones not described as rock but none of them were it.
I've recorded it myself just for this video.
@@unfa00 Good stuff! I would dl and add to my library if you post the song.
@@BesideTheVoid Thanks :D I could dig up the files and publish them somewhere od you want.
I have yet to find an open source Synthesizer that is in any way comparable to something like Massive, Sytrus, or Serum.
The closest thing is Alpha plus 2 but it's still very limited in comparison.
I've never heard of Alpha Plus 2! Two open-source powerhouse synths I know are Zyn-Fusion and Surge. Have you tried these? They may not look as impressive at first, but they are mighty powerful. I've made a lot of videos about Zyn-Fusion (and ZynAddSubFX). Massive honestly is quite limited IMO. I think it's appeal is based mostly on the wavetables supplied, but you can't make your own ones. And I personally don't like using presets :D
I've checked Alpha Plus 2 - it's not open-source - it's freeware(not to be confused with free software - I know, it's confusing) and it only runs (natively) on Windows.
I already use mostly open source software(godot, blender, manjaro linux etc). Once in awhile, I boot on my Windows 10 partition, to play around with FL studio, or play games. I'm definitely going to check for FL studio alternatives, and maybe one day, I don't need my Windows 10 partition at all.
I have heard that FL works very well in Wine, but I haven't tested it myself. Good luck! :)
Computers are so ubiquitous now, that way more people stumble into programming as either a hobby or career, boosting the the total number of developers existing, thus increasing the total number of developers working on open source projects. So, I think you are absolutely right: open source could soon dominate closed. I've been running a pure Linux environment for over a year now and have not missed Windows for even one minute. It''s unimaginably liberating. I am sticking with REAPER, though, as it is badass and I already owned it, but I think i'm 99% open source now.
Gentoo FTW!
I recently installed Manjaro and made the Linux conversion.
Totally loaded my Manjaro laptop with Linux audio and video software.
I really appreciate this video, FL studio is really the only thing keeping me tied to windows in any way. I've got a new ssd on the way for a fresh Linux install and I'm excited to try some of these DAWs
How is the process? With Windows 11 being the last straw for me, I'm strongly considering taking the same path.
unfa for president!
>president
>NOT WANT HIM TO BECOME THE PRIMER OF THE PEOPLE
LEAD THE WAY CHAIRMEN
This is a legendary intro
Hi unfa!
Thank to you and your videos I am a new linux music "producer"..
After my macbook stopped working I bought an huawei laptop for budget reasons (I can't and I don't want to spend money for a mac anymore).. I don't like windows at all so I started searching for something different.
After watching your videos about ardour I installed ubuntu studio and started using ardour with Jack and some plugins. It's so funny and... composing simple pop punk songs with drumgizmo, a midi bass and of course my guitar is really easy. I don't miss garageband and other simple Mac tools for now :) thank you for sharing your knowledge.
I couldn't agree more. I use ardour and I simply love it.
0:21 - I am. For nearly 9 years, the last 3 of which linux only, I kicked Windows in its rear end permanently and converted all of my storages to XFS.
5:40 - is the "Join us now" song yours?
Rosegarden whell known as professional tool as I hear about, and goes as component with professional studios
Been using Linux as my main distro for years now, but I know nothing about music production so I'm subbing just to learn a bit. Will you be covering Pipewire ?
Welcome! I've heard I've heard about PipeWire once, but I never used it, and I don't really know what it is.
@@unfa00 Pipewire is the future, it does what Jack does for audio and video, it's impressive now, but not really useable. Trust me, when people can remove Jack and Pulse and just have Pipewire, things will be much much more slick and generally, better.
I use LMMS (linux) and Ardour, it was a bit complicated at first, but not bad 🔥
Great video! Couldn't have said it better.
I'm with you all the way. I didn't even start to use computers for music production until I realized I could run Ardour on a 10 year old laptop and successfully use it for music production.
Same
Good commentary. As a community we ( in the Linux ecosystem ) number among the minority of computer users. And yet that is evolving - if only gradually.
I can only fully approve your idea. I'm a 12 (at least...) years very very happy Linux user...for everything! many many thanks UNFA for your share! GOOOOOD MUSIC!
Thank you :)
Yes, I'm using linux and FOSS, you've inspired me to make music on Linux, thank you
Great! My pleasure :D
Unfa Well Done!
But open source (ex: Linux) is another means/tool towards greater/more-important ends. You know electronic music & I'm clueless but definitely would like to pick-up the skill. ?Which of your playlists can a clomplete newbie like me use to learn electronic music composition, recording, production, etc, etc?? Oh, I just got a HP Z2 Mini G4 workstation with all the bells/whistles & will load Ubuntu Studio on it.
Thank you 😊 now I'm in Linux making music composition , video editing and software development ❤️LINUX FOREVER, Rip to windows and mac.
HI thanks for this video, I am 69 years old and you have inspired me to make some music, I hope I can learn how to use all these platforms, I just got my first Linux computer and I am loving it😍
Awesome! If you'd have any questions or trouble, remember that you can join my community chat and get help there!
chat unfa XYZ
We have a wonderful community and I probably learn more from them than they learn from me at this point :)
I'd just like to interject for a moment. What you're referring to as Linux, is in fact, GNU/Linux, or as I've recently taken to calling it, GNU plus Linux.
Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning GNU system made useful by the GNU corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by POSIX.
Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of GNU which is widely used today is often called "Linux", and many of its users are not aware that it is basically the GNU system, developed by the GNU Project.
There really is a Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine's resources to the other programs that you run.
The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Linux is normally used in combination with the GNU operating system: the whole system is basically GNU with Linux added, or GNU/Linux. All the so-called "Linux" distributions are really distributions of GNU/Linux.
If I could give you five thumbs up for this video, I would do it! You made a very strong and important statement.
Thank you!
Learning to use some linux software can be a bit harder than big name things, but with videos like this or other youtube content creators focusing on linux education for this software will be alot better.
Ubuntu studio checking in here. :D I started with Ubuntu many moons ago when I was getting into virtual pipe organs and I use it for everything now. the last commercial OS I used was Windows NT. The trajectory does look quite favorable of late. The biggest expense (other than the computer itself) is going to be getting good multi channel output devices.
Nice thoughts! Starting from the same argument, musicians should sell their music with open projects and free for anyone to sample... Right?
Unfa, please make a video on how to configure linux for music I have Forusrite 2i2 2nd gen and pop os but I am not sure how/where to start!
It has been so many days since I heard Rtfm that I forgot the meaning of RTFM. Which feels so good from a community standpoint.
Agree 100% I do art and coding and use Linux and OpenSource software only as well... it is a way of life and deeper than just a software choice is about freedom and do not be complacent with big companies!!
Ahh the beautiful world of Linux!!! I'm excited to get deeper into Linux and make some music. Support freeware!!! 🎸🤘
Awesome! Please note that freeware is not the same as free software :)
Hey. Just wondering what the best workflow/tools are to do live looping like, say, Reggie Watts did in his TED video. I have a midi player, and a midi drum pad, and a USB mic.
Thank you.
Good to see awakened young people going in the right direction.
Congratulations :-)