Audacity can be made work with jack or without it, but Audacity's jack support is not ideal. Jack is one of them, focused on low-latency and anywhere-to-anywhere connections (see ) but not specialised for "desktop applications" (for this use, there is pulseaudio that usually comes integrated in general distros, like ubuntu and linux mint). Paste here the terminal outputs if you wish.Īssuming alsa (or linux, more generally speaking) recognises the card, now it is a matter of the so-called "audio servers" or "audio systems". So, the first thing to check is whether your soundcard is supported by the linux kernel you are running.
LEXICON ALPHA DRIVER FOR WINDOWS 8 DRIVERS
Note that jack is not a device driver, i.e, it doesn't talk directly to your soundcard, but relies on and talks to the drivers provided by ALSA which are part of the linux kernel. The three programs above (and a lot more) rely on jack as the underlying audio system or "audio engine".
Ardour, qtractor and muse are three of the most popular linux DAWs. So could someone please confirm that this is correct or have I got it completely arse-about-face again!?Īudacity is a good audio editor, but for multitrack recording with realtime plugin effects, tracks, busses, etc, you need a DAW.
LEXICON ALPHA DRIVER FOR WINDOWS 8 INSTALL
*EDIT* Okay so I've done a little more reading and seems I've misunderstood the use of Jack and it is infact a foundation on which to build more software in order to get the results I want? So, assuming this is correct I should also install Audacity as a popular multitrack editing software and calf reverb to add effects, then run these through Jack? Although I'm still not sure where the compatability with my Lexicon Alpha comes into it. Your time in replying really is appreciated If there is a a step by guide around I'd be very grateful to be pointed in the right direction or if someone can at least give me a few things to try I'd be equally pleased! I've downloaded / added JACK, a metronome and a tuner but cannot find anything that makes sense in getting JACK to 'recognise' my Alpha. I've read in so many places that the Alpha works straight 'out of the box', which may well be the case but to be honest I'm only a beginner with my guitar, a newbie with Linux and this is the first audio interface I've ever purchased so I feel up s**t creak without a paddle! The usb light does come on on the Alpha when plugged into my laptop via usb so I'm assuming that it's being recognised but I'm not sure which 'software' I should be using to record and add effects in place of the Windows software that one would typically use. I realise I'm opening an old wound as it were but I'm having real trouble with my Lexicon Alpha and my Linux Mint 14 distro.