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Rachel App: Linux music geek

By Tina Gasperson on August 12, 2005 (8:00:00 AM)

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Rachel App is a renaissance woman whose interests are shared mostly by men and not other women. She's an independent label singer, songwriter, musician, and Linux geek who uses a variety of open source applications to record and enhance her music.
App has been using computers since she was eight years old, but her journey to software freedom began in 1998 when a friend introduced her to open source. The philosophy fit well with her "bare bones indie punk wonder woman" lifestyle, and by November 2003 she'd switched to Linux for good. This month App will share some of her Linux music mixing wisdom with a crowd of free software fans at the FAVE conference in Bristol, UK.

When she was a young girl, her mother bought her an Amstrad CPC6128, and App proceeded to learn Basic and "horrible assembly language." At about the same time, she was taking lessons in classical music and theory on the recorder and later, the piano. Throughout her teens, music and technology went hand in hand, and by 1992 App was running Windows 3.1 with a Roland keyboard, SoundBlaster audio, and Cakewalk's sequencer. "Then I went to university and got exposed to Unix," she says, "which we were using for some specialist applications developed by our teachers. I learned Fortran and C++, but I don't consider myself a programmer."

App eventually bought her own computer and starting making music in earnest. She's written more than 100 songs and recorded three CDs since 2002. At first, she used her Windows computer and freeware utilities ("whatever came with Computer Music magazine") to record the final mixes. She upgraded to more advanced software, and it worked fine for about year, when practicality suddenly invaded her technological comfort zone. "In October 2003, I bought a barebones system and was planning on using Windows 98, as installed on my older computer. Even though it worked, I realized that no new applications were being released for Windows 98, so my OS had kinda become obsolete. Upgrading to Windows XP meant buying a full copy of it and pretty much changing the OS in a way. So I decided to try out Linux. The concept of open source software made a lot of sense to me: programmers working together instead of working against each other."

App wasn't sure whether she'd like Linux, so she kept a Windows 98 partition. By November, she was sold on open source, so the friend who'd introduced her to Linux helped her install from a Knoppix CD and then upgrade to Debian unstable. "I decided to go with unstable, not testing, because music applications were quite new at the time and I thought many of them wouldn't be available as packages in Debian testing yet," App says. "My friend didn't install any of the music stuff, so I worked my way around ALSA on my own, using the Internet for info and help. After a few months, I got rid of Windows 98 altogether, as I came across applications that would do what I wanted on Linux."

App installed Ardour and Hydrogen "straight away," and says the only issue was a lack of documentation for Ardour. Even now, however, she backs up her Ardour files frequently because "a few plugins in Ardour make it crash randomly -- I get a little paranoid about it." She tried to install MuSe but gave up. She uses Rosegarden occasionally, but "most of my music is guitar-based, so I mostly use Ardour as my multi-track recorder. I actually sold my multitrack recorder a year ago because I was using Ardour 100% and was happy with it. I started out using Hydrogen to generate drums, but don't use it much now because I have a drum machine." She uses Jamin for mastering, and Audacity for audio editing.

App's been asked to perform and teach at the upcoming FAVE conference on August 20 in Bristol. FAVE is a community event for people who are interested in using creative software on Linux and other open source platforms. There will be talks on Internet filmmaking, 2D and 3D graphics, and Creative Commons licensing, as well as App's workshop on music production. "It's gonna be very practical, to learn how to use Ardour as a multitrack recorder. I figured I'd also show how to use Hydrogen, as drums are an issue for many bedroom musicians."

App says she's not sure what to expect from the audience at FAVE. "I'm going into this very open-minded and not really knowing what's going to happen." One thing she feels sure about is that the crowd will mostly be men, but App is used to being a gender minority whenever it comes to her fondness for Linux and music. "There are more women using technology than before, but it's still a male-dominated world. Women have recently been getting more involved in the world of DJing and sound engineering. So hopefully free software will follow."

Tina Gasperson writes about business and technology from an open source perspective.

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on Rachel App: Linux music geek

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and the point is...?

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on August 13, 2005 01:01 AM
Why not interview the kid down the street that uses Evolution for his mail? I've got to start screening these Newsforge articles before I read them.

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Re:and the point is...?

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on August 13, 2005 01:14 AM
If your point is that Newsforge should turn off anonymous comments, you've made it quite well.

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Re:and the point is...?

Posted by: Shad Van Den Hul on August 13, 2005 02:11 AM
A music professional has switched to using Linux completely. She (which is another important fact) was able to find suitable software for her needs. This was in the field of music which has not been a particular strong field of endeavor for Linux programers.

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Great article

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on August 13, 2005 02:44 AM
Thanks for a wonderful article. I would love to attend the live demonstration. Any chance that someone could record it and put it online?

I want to begin doing music recording in Linux. I was wondering what soundcard a professional like her uses.

Thanks,

Gonzalo

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Re:Great article

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on August 13, 2005 03:52 AM
Well, not sure about Linux compatibility with most pro audio interfaces, but look at some higher end M-Audio, RME, Motu, etc products.

They mentioned Roland keyboard...I wonder WHAT Roland keyboard it is? But that's not so important for the purpose of the article I suppose.

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Re:Great article

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on August 13, 2005 04:54 PM
The audio interface i use is Terratec DMX6 Fire. RME is supposed to be the most compatible brand.

If my memory doesn't fail me, it was a Roland E15.

Cheers
RachelAPP

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Dynebolic

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on August 15, 2005 11:33 PM
Dynebolic is a very nice out-of-the-box distribution wich includes Jack, LADSPA, Hydrogen, Audacity, MuSe and some video software as well.
<a href="http://dynebolic.org/" title="dynebolic.org">http://dynebolic.org/</a dynebolic.org>

Alvaro

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Debian and audio

Posted by: Sam Leathers on August 16, 2005 11:20 AM
Debian was too much of a pain to get working for an audio recording box. I'd recommend agnula (agnula.org) for a debian based distro setup for audio from the get go.

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music production and linux

Posted by: oystercatcher on August 16, 2005 11:11 PM
The article briefly describes a person who uses linux for music production. It wasnt easy and they had exposure to unix and programming in college.
Even though linux has drum machine software, they preferably use a firmware midi drum machine.
Sadly it takes a fairly knowledgeable computer user to use linux for music production.

My complaint about the article is that they could have given us a lot more info. Why are so many print articles more like tv soundbytes?

linux before rh5. recording with ecasound. music typesetting with lilypond. rosegarden for midi editing.

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