I have been looking at and thinking about reaper.
I am starting to loose patience with the LMMS development.
I have asked for swing and groove quantitation, many years ago now.
This has to do with me seeing a demonstration with an Atari ST, Cubase, a drum-machine and a Yamaha DX7.
We the public asked the guy to make some house / disco.
He clearly was not into that type of music, but programmed a simple beat.
We then said it sounded very mechanical, then he did something in Cubase, and boom it suddenly sounded like a real drummer.
He right clicked in Cubase in a midi pattern.
If this could be done on an Atari ST already, then how hard can it be to have this on a modern computer?
Were talking about the 80 ties.
From you tube I learned Cubase and Albeton have stuff like this, but a full Cubase is above my budget, and even worse it has no Linux version.
Off topic, I ones lend an Yamaha DX7 from a computer club, and hooked it up to my Atari ST with a pirated Cubase.
Sadly I found out the DX7 was not multitimbral.
(it can't play multiple instruments at the same time)
Still had fun because I had a drum pattern, from a floppy that came with an Atari ST magazine.
The good old days? Well not financially because you could buy a car for that money....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQvpgqE ... l=DanBaker
For the younger people here, the Atari only handled the midi part, the sounds are not coming from the Atari (except the metronome click), but from a sound module. I should never had throw away my Atari ?