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2025

What is Baxandall EQ?

Baxandall

The Baxandall EQ is a type of equalizer that was originally designed by Peter Baxandall in the 1950s. It's famous for its smooth, musical response, especially in the high and low frequencies.

The design is particularly popular because of its gentle, broad shaping of the frequency spectrum, which is great for tonal balance without causing harsh artifacts or overloading the sound.



Spectrum Analyzers for Linux

Spectrum Analyzers

When it comes to audio production on Linux, finding high-quality visualization tools can sometimes be a challenge. Fortunately, two spectrum analyzers—EasySSP and ToneBoosters Spectrogram—stand out for their precision, user-friendly design, and cross-platform availability.

Whether you’re mixing music, mastering, or performing sound design, these tools can give you the detailed insight your ears alone might miss.



Chorus Plugins

Delay Plugins

Although Linux has no shortage of compressors, EQs, and reverbs, dedicated chorus effects are surprisingly sparse by comparison. Still, the plugins that are available cover a useful range—from lush vintage emulations to transparent modern widening tools and experimental stereo processors. Whether you’re looking to add gentle movement to pads, widen guitars, or give synths that classic 80s shimmer, the following chorus plugins represent some of the best free and cross-platform options available to Linux producers today.



Drums EQ in Reaper

Drumkits

Creating a polished drum mix in REAPER can transform a good track into a great one. Whether you’re producing jazz, rock, electronic, or anything in between, shaping each drum element individually gives you far more control and clarity. In this guide, I’ll walk through how I prepare and process the x42 Blonde Bop stereo drumkit—starting from a simple MIDI import and ending with a flexible, mix-ready drum bus setup.



Why the AVL x42-plugins Drum Kits and DrumGizmo Rock

Drumkits

If you’re running Ubuntu Studio, you already know it ships with an impressive suite of pro-audio tools ready to go out of the box. But one feature that deserves far more attention is the collection of drum kits included with the x42-plugins—especially when paired with optional DrumGizmo support. Together, they deliver incredibly realistic, hard-hitting drum sounds that rival paid libraries. For Linux musicians, these built-in kits are an absolute powerhouse.



Vocal Effects Chain using

Vocals

Crafting a polished, professional vocal sound doesn’t have to feel mysterious or overwhelming. With the right effects chain—and a little guidance from the excellent Joe Gilder of Home Studio Corner https://www.youtube.com/homestudiocorner, you can transform raw recordings into mixes that shine. In this post, I’ll walk through my go-to vocal chain in Reaper using Linux-friendly plugins, showing you the exact steps and settings that consistently deliver clean, present, and expressive vocals.



Amp In A Box

Challenege

Amp-in-a-box pedals have become essential for guitarists who want great tone straight into a DI, whether for recording, live use, or silent practice. In this comparison, we take a close look at three popular options: the budget-friendly Joyo British Sound, the versatile TC Electronic JIMS 800, and the classic SansAmp GT2. We’ll weigh their price, features and real-world sound to help you choose the best DI-ready pedal for your setup.



Singularity Virtual Bass

Challenege

Finding a realistic, mix-ready virtual bass instrument on Linux has always been a challenge. Most commercial bass plugins ignore the platform entirely, leaving producers with limited, often outdated options. That’s why Singularity Virtual Bass stands out so strongly: it’s one of the only modern, fully featured bass instruments that runs natively on Linux and delivers professional-quality tone. For Linux-based musicians, it’s not just a good option — it’s practically the option.



ToneLib GFX

Challenege

If you use Linux and want a powerful, flexible solution for guitar amp and effect simulation — without hauling around real amps or complicated setups — ToneLib GFX deserves a serious look. It’s a full-featured amp-and-effects modeling suite that runs natively on Linux (as well as Windows and macOS), meaning you can plug in your guitar straight into an interface and get realistic amp tones and effects in software.



Pultec-Style Tube EQ

Pultec EQ

When it comes to analog equalizers, few names carry the weight of the Pultec EQ. Revered by engineers, producers, and mastering professionals alike, the Pultec-style tube EQ has become a staple in the world of audio processing. Famous for its smooth yet powerful sound-shaping capabilities, it has made its mark not only in recording studios but also in the mastering process, where fine-tuning a track to perfection is the goal.