I would also recommend
Introduction to Sound Processing
by Davide Rocchesso (2003, 236 pages)
It is less know than your 2 references but still is very good.
It is not targeted to developers but cover your requirements
and other sound processing related subjects (plus some useful
mathematical fundamentals) As for coding there are some Matlab
examples.
This book has also the great advantage to be published under a Creative
Commons Attribution Share-Alike license and can be downloaded for free
at:
http://profs.sci.univr.it/~rocchess/htmls/corsi/SoundProcessing/SoundProces…
You should [0] also be able to order a printed version on the publisher
website:
http://www.mondo-estremo.com/publications/publications/public.html
damien
[0] But I am not very sure that the publisher is still running.
Otherwise contact the author (his email is in the pdf)
On Tue, 16 Jan 2007 07:47:35 -0500
Paul Davis <paul(a)linuxaudiosystems.com> wrote:
On Tue, 2007-01-16 at 07:30 -0500, Dave Phillips
wrote:
Damon Chaplin wrote:
What are the recommended books to read for people
new to audio
development? (Covering things like synthesis techniques, effects
processing and basic acoustics stuff.)
On the bottom of the Documentation section of
linux-sound.org I
found these 2:
Computer Music Tutorial
by Curtis Roads (1995, 1254 pages)
A misnamed classic. It's no tutorial, but it is crammed with
information. However, it's not really targeted to developers.
although true, i have to stress that Roads' book was absolutely
pivotal in getting me started. it provides a background, a context, a
way of thinking about the goals. its certainly not useful directly for
developers, but everyone writing audio software should know most (or
at least a good chunk) of what is in there.
___________________________________________________________________________
Yahoo! Mail r�invente le mail ! D�couvrez le nouveau Yahoo! Mail et son interface
r�volutionnaire.
http://fr.mail.yahoo.com