Short version: Please tell me your favourit distro(s) for making music and why.

Long version/my use case: I’ve actually recently decided to migrate to a laptop setup from desktop. I’ve already decided on the laptop and will be running a dual boot setup. I think between SuperCollider, Pd, and Reaper, Linux could have me mostly (maybe completely) covered.

It’s tempting to just go for Ubuntu Studio or AV Linux, as they seems to have plenty of stuff ready to go. But at the same time I kind of know the apps I want to use, and (I assume) I can just get them myself for just about any other distro. I don’t want to pick a distro just because it comes with a bunch of semi-relevant stuff. But maybe it’s worth doing just that?

If it helps, my background is DAWs (Cubase and Reaper mainly) with softsynth, a little bit of eurorack and a chunk of VCV Rack, and a sprinkling of MaxMSP. I also have a monome Norns shield, for which I am attempting to learn Lua. I have no background in programming but I am drawn to learning SuperCollider as well. I have both 5 pin and usb midi controllers, and a Steinberg UR22 mkII.

  • stephenc@waveform.social
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    1 year ago

    Used to be a Ubuntu user but wasn’t a fan of the direction it was going a few years ago. Nowadays I am using Fedora and running Bitwig on it.

    • R3V1BE@waveform.social
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      1 year ago

      Hell ya. I just learned about Bitwig and started using it. What are your thoughts on it? I’m coming in as an FL Studio user.

  • BKLronin@waveform.social
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    1 year ago

    Iḿ quite happy with manjaro despite a few not so pretty incidents in the past. Endeavour OS seems a good choice too.

    • murdock@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      I’m trying to choose a distro for a music-focused computer and many searches point me back to manjaro. However, I’ve heard some negative news (perhaps more meta?) about that project; what has your experience been? Is setup a long and/or bug-riddled process?

      • BKLronin@waveform.social
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        1 year ago

        Distro installation is installer click through with hardware auto setup. Had all my VSTs running including Native Instruments, Waves and Arturia etc via yabridge. Sometimes a bit fiddely but thats not the distros fault. I have the same installation running for quite some time so updates went well monstly.

        THey had some key and cert issues a year ago and that seems to be the main reason why its not the most recommended distro anymore. Many recommend Endeavour OS but I havent tested it as a audio platform yet.

  • LoopDigger@waveform.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m using AV Linux. The main reason I picked that was for the low latency kernel and it saved building a bunch of stuff from source

  • mrufrufin@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I started off with Ubuntu Studio when I first switched to Linux from Macs,… I dunno how long ago. Then I switched to regular Ubuntu with XFCE since I didn’t use half of what Ubuntu Studio came with and when Canonincal announced their IPO plans, figured I’d use it as an excuse to explore Debian so pretty much I just use Debian nowadays.

    I tend to use SuperCollider (sometimes with TidalCycles running for live coding), Pure Data, Audacity, and very rarely a DAW (but if I do, Ardour). I use an RME Fireface UCX which is USB class-compliant I think it’s called(?). I dunno, I used go the normal JACK route with qjackctl but switched over the Pipewire (which I finally got down to usable latencies while playing a bass going through the interface without too many xruns) and qpwgraph for routing. I dunno, it just works more-or-less and isn’t so much trouble to set up (was a bit more painful with the normal JACK route and feeding PulseAudio into JACK and doing all the PulseAudio/JACK sink stuff, Pipewire has made that workflow significantly more streamlined).

  • murkrellr@waveform.social
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    1 year ago

    I think you will want to make sure linux supports your laptop, beyond that, any modern linux distro will work, I like Mint, which is an ubuntu flavor. I got a lenovo laptop, because historically, linux had always had excellent support for IBM stuff… and it worked- only it took another release or two for there to be support for this particular trackpad. Ardour, Rosegarden, Lmms, Pd, Csound and Supercollider all come in the software manager for mint. good luck! have fun!

    • eucalyptam@waveform.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      I’ll be getting a Lenovo too. I hadn’t even considered support for hardware. I guess the same goes for midi gear?

      • murkrellr@waveform.social
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        1 year ago

        i would search “Linux on lenovo (model#) laptop” to see if you can find out anything before hand about compatibility… I think lenovo continues to be well supported. MIDI will work, though if your external hardware MIDI gear has its own config programs, they are prob only for win and mac. i have an akai usb midi controller and i have to boot windows to change its on-board config then reboot to linux to continue using it… i know its prob hackable but i havent.

        • murkrellr@waveform.social
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          1 year ago

          also, my distro pic was based on the fact i do a little of everything on my laptop… but these multimedia-specific distros seem really cool and worth looking into, i just havent yet.

  • Loom In Essence@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    How old and how powerful is your computer?

    You can run a DAW on any distro and it will work fine. If you want an environment tuned for audio, you can get a music-oriented distro, or get a normal distro and tweak it.

    Ubuntu Studio is the popular one. But you can avoid the bloat of ubuntu by installing mint and then installing ubuntu studio controls. That’s what I’m using and it’s great. This applies to any ubuntu-based system (kubuntu, lubuntu, xubuntu, popos, etc).

    Fedora Jam is apparently a good rival. I hear a lot of love for AV Linux too. I’ve never used either one.

    Archlinux has a detailed section on setting up arch for pro audio, and that will apply to either manjaro or endeavouros too. I personally love arch and endeavouros. But the extra time for manual set up might not result in any benefit for you. but the real downside is that it’s potentially dangerous to wait a month without updating. If you stash your machine for three months and then update your rolling release distro, you might experience one of those horror stories of a broken system. Whereas with mint, you can install it and leave it alone for a year and it’s probably gonna be fine.

    The big advantage of arch is that it will have updates for new hardware sooner than ubuntu-based distros. Aside from that, you install it for the fun of building it and the customization that’s offered to (forced upon) you.