Ardour is an amazing DAW whether or not the devs pick up the phone for users but the fact that they do takes it over the top as something much more than the tens of thousands of lines of code, IMHO it is a living breathing entity with a human face. We are confident that this software will remain the go-to choice for our. The most amazing thing about Ardour to me is the community and hands on support of Paul and the development team, I’m just an average schmoe and more often than not if I pop by IRC with a question (often stupid) Paul himself will take the time to either answer or point me in the right direction with a link. In our last review of Ardour, we gave the software a glowing five out of five stars. I would say that ArdourVST has slipped in it’s potential for daily use but with all the incredible LV2 offerings out there now it is a non-issue. I’m sure the Ardour devs will groan but ArdourVST has always been important to me especially in the days before LV2, I pretty much made a science of tweaking Wine versions and Ardour SVN builds and had a really solid ArdourVST setup for about a year with Ardour 2.4. I don’t do a lot of Synths or heavy duty region editing and I found when I did venture into that sort of thing Ardour was easy to use and quite stable. Disenchanted and bored with XP and lower rent DAW’s after a few years I got into Linux and I found Ardour in it’s 2.X series was as reliable as N-Track and a little more intuitive I really liked features like Auto input and Linux supported some of my aging hardware like a Tascam US-122 quite well. I foundered with XP for a few years and was put off by the aggressive pricing and all to numerous upgrades to the Steinberg products and tried some alternatives like N-Track which never quite seemed to get there as far as reliability. Then Windows XP came out and effectively killed both support for Cubase 3.5 and ISA soundcards. In 1998 I had an amazingly functional DAW for it’s time with Windows 98SE, CubaseVST 3.5 and a Turtle Beach Pinnacle ISA Soundcard that did reliable Wavetable sampling and 24bit ADC (in 1998!). Like akavir I have to say Ardour is probably the one single Linux application that swung me over to Linux. I have to give my utmost respect to the Ardour team for making such a fine product, that I left Windows 5 years ago for! Keep up the amazing work! If you are interested, you can check out the reviews at If you are an artist/musician that would like a snippet of a Linux created/recorded song you’ve produced included, please let me know, I need all the submissions I can get! While I am very familiar with the program, I always give the community an opportunity to throw in their two cents as to what features I should focus on, and what makes their product stand out from the crowd? So, any opinions from the ardour community as to focus and differentiation?Īlso, at the beginning of each video review I feature a 10-15 second sample from a Linux artist. Very soon I will be doing a review of Ardour. I review Linux distros and software, and focus mainly on studio distros and software. Let me start by saying, Ardour is my favorite DAW in the world, and I’m really looking forward to the release of Ardour3! I run a linux review site called ‘Linux In Review’ that includes YouTube video and written reviews.
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