macOS Edition Audio Apps

8
Programs

Showing 1–8 of 8

n-Track Studio app

n-Track Studio v2025

283 MB · Free · 56,664 downloads
n-Track Studio is an effective solution for recording music on your PC. It captures audio tracks with studio…
4.0 1
Get
Boom 3D

Boom 3D v2023

27.8 MB · Free · 36,820 downloads
Free and premium audio enhancer that improves playback, adds surround sound, and offers customizable equalizer and scene effects.…
5.0 2
Get
FL Studio

FL Studio v25.2.5

661 MB · Free · 17,777 downloads
FL Studio numerous features are amazing considering it costs at last half as much as similar programs. This…
4.0 2
Get
VinylStudio

VinylStudio v2023

5.42 MB · Free · 10,049 downloads
VinylStudio allows you to quickly create either one audio CD or multiple MP3 CDs containing 150 three-minute tracks…
4.0 1
Get
REAPER

REAPER v7.72

9.59 MB · Free · 8,839 downloads
REAPER is a professional tool that helps computer users to handle their music collections in an efficient manner.…
2.3 3
Get
Boom 2

Boom 2 v2024

19.2 MB · Free · 8,284 downloads
Free and premium audio enhancer for Mac that improves volume, tone, and surround sound. You can create custom…
5.0 2
Get
LMMS

LMMS v2024

94.5 MB · Free · 6,932 downloads
LMMS (Linux MultiMedia Studio) is a free digital audio workstation for creating, editing, and producing music. It features…
4.6 13
Get
MuseScore

MuseScore v2024

104 MB · Free · 6,013 downloads
MuseScore is a free, open-source music notation app for writing, playing, and printing sheet music. It offers a…
4.3 23
Get

About Edition Audio

This group is broader than its name suggests. It holds straightforward audio editors for trimming and cleaning a recording, full music production environments for composing and mixing, tag editors for organizing a music library, and format converters. They share a subject — sound — but the workflows have little in common.

For simple jobs, a plain editor is the right tool: cut a clip, remove a hiss, adjust levels, export the result. Music production is a different world. Programs built around multitrack timelines, virtual instruments, and effect chains expect real time spent learning them, and picking one for a quick trim is more than the job needs.

Library tools solve a quieter problem. A large music collection accumulates wrong titles, missing album art, and inconsistent artist names, and a tag editor fixes all of that in bulk without altering the audio itself. Converters handle the other common need — moving between MP3, FLAC, WAV, and AAC when a device or program is fussy about formats.

Before installing, decide which of these jobs you actually have. Recording quality depends far more on the microphone and the room than on which editor you choose, so a modest free program is often enough for spoken-word and podcast work. Reserve the heavier production suites for music that needs real arrangement and mixing.