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Bitwig and Presonus just released an open source exchange format between DAW. It would even transfer automation data which seemed to be until now a pain point. I think it's a good thing to be able to collaborate with other musicians easily.

So what do you guys think?

[-] Openmastering@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

define truly lossless please. Does it mean checking if the audio has lost any high frequencies like in mp3?

2

When I'm not mastering I work with the team from analogvibes, painstakingly re-creating iconic analog hardware for recording studios.

We're launching a DIY version of a Tube Opto compressor (aka LA2A "Silverplate") really soon. If you're into DIY and sound, this compressor is killer on vocals and bass, and, well everything you throw at it. The silverplate edition is a treasure from the late 70's

Full kits are quite rare and we're confident in our experience launching other products this way. Subscribe to our launch newsletter if you'd love to have fresh, high quality new old gear in your rack.

1
Looptober 2022 (lemmy.ml)

Looptober 2022

The goal is to make one loop every day in october. I'll try to tackle it, create a bunch of hopefully nice stuff and learn.

Are you in?

Post your loops here

1

Punk Labs just released OneTrick Simian, an audio Plugin drum machine perfect for this vintage drum sound. If you're doing any kind of retrowave, synthwave, vaporware etc, it's just perfect. Give it a try and tell us how you like it. And share your music.

And I really like their website and marketing!

2
Free Risers Sample Pack! (cloud.samuelaubert.eu)

I did a sample pack for musicians using a modular synthesizer a while ago. It's made of 23 Risers for different music genres. I hosted it for a while on another platform, and as I'm moving to a more robust solution, I want to share it again with you all #musicians.

The risers are CC0, there's no E-Mail trap, no tracking, nothing. They are entirely free. Click the link, download them, et voilà!

cloud.samuelaubert.eu/nextclou…

Enjoy, make music

1

zrythm just released its beta version.

go give it a try, it's a really promising DAW, free software, multiplatform. Good looking. And "modern". And with a chord track.

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submitted 3 years ago by Openmastering@lemmy.ml to c/webdev@lemmy.ml

I'm not affiliated, but I like the look and feel of inkline. At the moment, they are working on porting it to Vue3. It's a nice alternative to Veautify etc.

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submitted 3 years ago by Openmastering@lemmy.ml to c/frontend@lemmy.ml

I started learning web development with it. And I really enjoy the format so far. Have you ever tried to learn web dev online?

1

A classic question, but as linux audio is getting bigger and bigger and even I can't cope with all the great new plugins, I'd be glad to hear what you all are using in order to make great mixes.

2

Zrythm is a new (still in alpha version) DAW on the not overly crowded FOSS DAW market. It's aimed at music producers, not necessarily engineers like ardour.

What I like a lot, is that it does a bit of everything, borrows nice concepts here and there, here are a few examples.

  • Dragging the bottom right corner of a region duplicates the region.
  • It supports all linux plugins format (I'm looking at you LMMS)
  • It has a nice plugin browser, a monitor section and you can easily export stems (I'm looking at you qtractor)
  • I has a chord/scale helper, perfect for creating solid harmonies.
  • It has a solid MIDI system (looking at you ardour)
  • It does audio and MIDI, od course
  • You can modulate parameters using a modulator track (think modulate your pan or just any plugin parameter using an LFO)

It's not entirely stable yet, there a quite some little things to iron out, but it's already usable, testable, and the dev is really reactive. Please report bugs (you can even do it per email, without singing in) and support the project if you can.

1
submitted 3 years ago by Openmastering@lemmy.ml to c/webdev@lemmy.ml

Is it a good thing for developing fast mobile pages? Or yet another Google gimmick that will disappear in 3 years?

1

great audio mix tip to thicken a complete mix and bring important elements forward:

It's a parallel mixbus compression technique from Andrew Scheps. No need to watch the 10 minutes long video here it is:

  • create a bus with any kind of compressor.
  • send all tracks except the drums to this bus. The sends have be post fader.
  • Compress the bus aggressively (fast-medium attack, fast release, 4:1 ratio up to 10dB gain reduction)
  • bring the bus fader up until it blends and thickens all your front elements.
  • Play with your compressors characters, try different ones etc. That's the creative side. -Enjoy
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