hi... this is my first time online since lad Conference.
so i would like to announce galan-0.2.14 (as seen on lad Conference)
galan is another modular synthesizer. It supports sub patches like pd
and jmax. But has separation of mesh and Controls.
It also supports OpenGL Scene Graphs which can be controlled by your
audio data, the sequencers etc...
homepage is at
http://galan.sourceforge.net
find the download links from there...
--
torben Hohn
http://galan.sourceforge.net -- The graphical Audio language
Hi guys! (and gals).
I am looking into building a new machine, and I want to do some home-studio
recording with it. I was hoping that some of you could lend some of your
expert advice.
It sounds like SCSI is pretty-much a must in these situations, true? What
I was wondering about in particular is if anyone has tried anything like
this: Setting up a machine with an IDE hard drive to hold the system files
(say an ata 133 7200 rpm...) and a scsi disk for the dumping ground of the
audio programs such as ecasound, audacity or Ardour. I think I would put
the swap partition on the scsi drive as well. Obviously I am trying to
save a little money here, and I am trying to minimize latency. (I think
that somewhere around the $2K mark is my limit.) I am accustomed to using
multitrack analog units, but digital/computer recording is still extremely
new to me.
Any thoughts on this?
I would also love to hear any suggestions regarding what disks,
motherboards, cases and heatsinks people recommend and have had luck with.
Thanks!
Chris
From: toby(a)tobiah.org To: linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu Subject:
Re: [linux-audio-user] LinuxConsole Reply-To:
linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu Yann Le Doaré wrote:
>> Hi evrybody !
>>
>> (sorry for my poor english)
>>
>> I am developing a live Linux CD, called LinuxConsole
>
>
What direction will your CD take that would
differentiate it from the venerable Knoppix CD?
Tobiah
-> I am using ALSA Drivers
-> Knoppix is not modular (to my knowledge)
-> LinuxConsole core files stay in 55Mb
Hello linux-audio-user-request(a)music.columbia.edu
I have received your e-mail regarding 'linux-audio-user digest, Vol 1 #331 - 17 msgs' I will be out of the office until the 24th of March. Please refer any queries that require immediate attention to Phil Carroll @ philc(a)europlex.ie
Regards
Richard Caldwell
Hi evrybody !
(sorry for my poor english)
I am developing a live Linux CD, called LinuxConsole
(http://linuxconsole.tuxfamily.org)
First it was made to use a PC box as a console games.
Now it plays games, music, videos, browse Web, disks, burn CDs,...
It is a "modularized" CD, the 'core' system (drivers+X11+Window maker)
stays in memory, while modules (mozilla, games, cups, openoffice) stay
on CD or hard disk (ext fs,fat,ntfs,...).
I'am using ALSA drivers.
I search someone to help me to make an 'audio' module, with most linux
audio applications
If someone is intrested, thanks to post a message to LinuxConsole forum
Thanks
Yann Le Doaré
Brest
France
Hi.
I released ZynAddSubFX 1.2.0
It is a powerfull software synthesizer for Linux and
Windows, and it is located at
http://zynaddsubfx.sourceforge.net/
News:
1.2.0 - ZynAddSubFX is ported to Windows ;-)
- added internal Virtual Keyboard
- added Configuration window
- added frequency tracking to filter
- improved the OscilGen (harmonic filter, RMS
normalisation, etc..)
- improved the recorder (uses the WAV file
format and it starts only when a key is pressed)
- added filter interpolation if the frequency is
changed very fast (it removes some annoying clicks)
- other improovements, bugfixes, speedups and
cleanups of the code
Paul.
__________________________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Platinum - Watch CBS' NCAA March Madness, live on your desktop!
http://platinum.yahoo.com
>John Ouzts wrote:
>> I just did a fresh Gentoo 1.4 install in a new machine with an RME 96/8 PAD
>> card, which uses the rme96 driver. System sounds now come to my hifi system
>> through the rme card, so I think the driver is loading and working.
> >
> >I cannot get Audacity or Ardour to record, however. Audacity works fine in
>>the
> >same machine when using the monopolist's operating system, however. Running
> >on that partition, Audacity finds 11 or 12 sound devices, the 8 RME
>>channels
> >and the builtin VIA sound chip devices. Under Linux, Audacity only finds
> >/dev/dsp, and sometimes not that.
> >
> >How do I get Audacity to see other devices, or is that my problem?
> >
> >John
> >
>
>This seems like a simple(tm) setup problem.
>
>Can you send us the output of...
>
>lsmod; cat /proc/asound/cards
>
>That will give us an overview of your setup.
Thanks Patrick, here's what you asked for:
Module Size Used by Not tainted
snd-pcm-oss 39300 0 (autoclean)
snd-mixer-oss 13624 2 (autoclean) [snd-pcm-oss]
snd-via82xx 9356 0
snd-ac97-codec 31044 0 [snd-via82xx]
snd-mpu401-uart 3840 0 [snd-via82xx]
snd-rawmidi 15584 0 [snd-mpu401-uart]
snd-seq-device 4416 0 [snd-rawmidi]
snd-rme96 16396 2
snd-pcm 67936 0 [snd-pcm-oss snd-via82xx snd-rme96]
snd-timer 12840 0 [snd-pcm]
snd 31852 0 [snd-pcm-oss snd-mixer-oss snd-via82xx
snd-ac97-codec snd-mpu401-uart snd-rawmidi snd-seq-device snd-rme96 snd-pcm
snd-timer]
soundcore 3940 7 [snd]
ntfs 71148 2 (autoclean)
8139too 14728 1
sr_mod 12184 0 (unused)
sg 26124 0 (unused)
ide-scsi 7600 0
0 [PAD ]: Digi96 - RME Digi96/8 PAD
RME Digi96/8 PAD at 0xdd000000, irq 19
1 [8233AC ]: VIA8233 - VIA 8233A/C
VIA 8233A/C at 0xe400, irq 10
I have also discovered that kmix appears as a gray window without any sliders
or labels. Alsamixer shows one slider labelled DAC, which will adjust. I also
got an error message with says: Mixer device /dev/mixer is missing volume and
PCM controls.
Gentoo uses devfsd, so I am wondering if I need to set some devices in
devfsd.conf.
Thanks again, John
Hello, everyone :)
I have been teaching myself to do all my work with extracting from and
recording to CD's from the command line, using Red Hat Linux 8. I have
been having excellent success, but there's one thing I haven't been able
to figure out. Before posting this, I studied the man pages for
cdrecord, cdparanoia, cdda2wav and lame, and I couldn't find what I was
looking for, so here goes: is there any way that I can have the song
titles that I download from CDDB be automatically made into the
filenames of the tracks that I extract or encode? Example: I just ran
cdda2wav -vall cddb=0 -D0,1,0 -B -Owav from the command line, and I got
the following output (suitably clipped):
Album title: 'Mansion Builder' [from 2nd Chapter Of Acts]
Track 1: 'Rod And Staff'
Track 2: 'Mansion Builder'
Track 3: 'Ps. 93'
Track 4: 'Gold In The Clouds'
Track 5: 'I'll Give My Life Away'
Track 6: 'Rainbow'
Track 7: 'Well, Haven't You Heard'
Track 8: 'Lightning Flash'
Track 9: 'Starlight, Starbright'
Track 10: 'Make My Life A Prayer To You'
Track 11: 'Daydreamer'
Later in the output, I got messages like these:
track 1 'Rod And Staff' successfully recorded
track 2 'Mansion Builder' successfully recorded
track 3 'Ps. 93' successfully recorded
Here are the file names relating to the above samples:
audio_01.inf
audio_01.wav
audio_02.inf
audio_02.wav
audio_03.inf
audio_03.wav
Is there any way that, instead of the filenames being like those above,
that I can just have them come out this way, so that I can save having
to manually rename them if I want to make an mp3 cd (our DVD player
displays the folder names and track titles on our TV :)):
Mansion Builder - 2nd Chapter Of Acts.wav
Ps. 93 - 2nd Chapter Of Acts.wav
Rod And Staff - 2nd Chapter Of Acts.wav
I just tried k3b, and it created a 2nd Chapter Of Acts/Mansion Builder
folder, and it put the following automatically in it:
Mansion Builder.wav
Ps. 93.wav
Rod And Staff.wav
If anyone can enlighten me on how to do that from the command line, I
would be very appreciative :). I don't care if I have to use a
different command than I've been using, as I'm willing to learn :)
Steven P. Ulrick
Hello linux-audio-user-request(a)music.columbia.edu
I have received your e-mail regarding 'linux-audio-user digest, Vol 1 #336 - 1 msg' I will be out of the office until the 24th of March. Please refer any queries that require immediate attention to Phil Carroll @ philc(a)europlex.ie
Regards
Richard Caldwell
I would like to record live audio.... quality is not important, what is
important is that it is a clear recording. It's a lecture recording, the only
output that is avalible, is a monitor out, which comes straight from the
mixing desk.
Are there any recommedations, as to which application to use?? Thanks in
advance.
--
*****
Not everyone is touched by an Angel...
... Those that are, never forget the experience
*****