Also after recording track two and disconnecting the inputs, id have to leave the plugins active in order to hear the track as recorded. It seems quite a lot of usage for three simple basic tracks. Furthermore, when reopening and playing the session the DSP usage would swing from anywhere from 10% to 90%, staying at a rather busy 28% if un-interfered with. Also a log window displaying the message Zombified kept making its presence. I also started getting the close and save session appearing a few times. After adding a new plugin, as soon as I touched any parameter I’d get a message saying that either Jack or Ardour were to fast and hence disconnected, since Jack was still running I suspect the problem is with Ardour. Next, I decided to do a third track (lead guitar) and at this point it started getting a little shaky. Next I recorded a rock rhythm guitar track using three Caps plug ins and the cool sounding Tap Reverberator, great stuff. I first created a simple pattern/groove on Hydrogen, quite a remarkably sounding piece of software, and recorded it onto Ardour, managing to synchronically trigger it all from Jack, COOL! I did a little editing copying, pasting, punching in, etc., and was beginning to get very, very excited. However when testing Ardour I encountered a few problems. The installation ran smoothly and everything seemed operational. In such a setup Ardour would be crucial! I’ve spent the last 36 six hours testing most of the stuff. However after delving into the potential of 64Studio I was considering a permanent shift towards the desktop. I usually record on a Roland VS1880 (18 track) HD recorder and limit my computer to final mixes. Anyways, c’est la vie! Subsequently a few days after, I installed 64Studio, since I’m a songwriter/musician, it seems to be the ultimate recording system. After replacing every component one by one, and trough a process of elimination despairingly discovered that the bastard switch on the case had been the culprit. Hello to everyone, recently my computer kept switching on and off perpetually and when consulting my London Linux Guru friend Trevor, was confronted with “It sounds like a hardware problem”.
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