Reuben Martin wrote:
"There is wav output module within alsamodularsynth
itself, or if you wish, you
can run it as a jack client and direct the output to
any number of recording programs."
I tried that, and I could see that the size of the wav
file was growing, but when I played it back it was
full of silence. I suppose I don't have the right
mixer channel set for capture?
Also, when connecting the wav output module to my AMS
patch, can I have both the pcm output module and the
wav module connected by the 'cables,' or should it be
an either/or deal?
Thanks,
Mark
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
As the subj. line says, how do I do that?
I have a patch loaded with ams, then I play it with
pmidi -p 129:0 foo.mid
I'm trying to save the output into a wav (or raw).
Here's the output of arecord -l:
**** List of CAPTURE Hardware Devices ****
card 0: AudioPCI [Ensoniq AudioPCI], device 0:
ES1371/1 [ES1371 DAC2/ADC]
Subdevices: 0/1
Subdevice #0: subdevice #0
I'm tired of reading docs that explain everything
else. I feel like I'm almost there...
Help!
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
Can anyone tell me how to send jack output out the spdif i/o on a delta
66? I can't make head or tails of it. I want to send 6 different jack
outs out to the 4 analog outs and 2 digitals.
Thanks
Iain
Hello!
I'm using ALSA on Fedora 2 and I want to ask how to capture da cd-audio input and line-in input separateley?
Now I use /dev/dsp, but this gives me both channels mixed. I want them one by one is there something like /dev/linein or /dev/cdain ?
I use this with darkice to broadcast internet radio
thanx
bye
BEAST/BSE version 0.6.5 is available for download at:
ftp://beast.gtk.org/pub/beast/v0.6/
or
http://beast.gtk.org/beast-ftp/v0.6/
This is a development version of BEAST/BSE, the BEdevilled Audio SysTem
and the Bedevilled Sound Engine. BEAST is a powerful music composition
and modular synthesis application released as free software under the
GNU GPL and GNU LGPL, that runs under unix.
The project is hosted at:
http://beast.gtk.org
A mailing list is available at:
http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/beast/
GUI skins, example sounds and instrumets for BEAST/BSE as well as
screenshots can be found at:
http://beast.gtk.org/browse-bse-files.htmlhttp://beast.gtk.org/screenshots/index.html
This development series of BEAST has a lot of the internals redone,
many new GUI features and a sound generation back-end separated
from all GUI activities.
Outstanding new features include support for skins, many sample
file formats, MIDI file import abilities, an improved piano roll
widget, the track editor which allows for easy selection of
synthesisers or samples as track sources, loop support in songs,
mixer support, unlimited Undo/Redo capabilities and MIDI automation.
Overview of Changes in BEAST/BSE 0.6.5:
* New supported file formats:
GUS Patches - Load patchfiles as ordinary samples [Stefan Westerfeld]
BseWave - A new tool bsewavetool allows creation and compression
of multi-sample files which can be loaded by beast.
This tool is experimental and not currently being installed,
ask questions or report problems with it on beast(a)gnome.org.
* New Effects:
Saturator - Saturate audio signals, implements various saturation types.
* New scripts:
Track Busses - Automatically create mixer busses for tracks
* Fixed MIDI file import to create required mixer setup
* Added playback position indicator to piano roll
* Fixate zoom position while zooming piano roll
* Fixed saving of BseMixer state to BSE files
* Improved sample file caching algorith
* Improved BSE file parsing robustness
* AMD64 fixes [Stefan Westerfeld]
* Lots of miscellaneous bug fixes
* Updated British English translation [David Lodge]
* Updated Canadian English translation [Adam Weinberger]
* Updated Czech translation [Miloslav Trmac]
* Updated Dutch translation [Tino Meinen]
* Updated Spanish translation [Jorge Gonzalez]
* Added Bulgarian translation [Iassen Pramatarov]
* Added Kinyarwanda translation [Steve Murphy]
--
Stefan Westerfeld, Hamburg/Germany, http://space.twc.de/~stefan
Esben Stien wrote:
"Any free tools to transform voice? (controlling timbre, tone, formant,
reverberation, and pitch)."
I've found this collection of ladspa plugins useful:
http://quitte.de/dsp/pvoc.html
There is no seperate formant shifter, but the phase vocoding pitch
shifter works well on voice, and the exaggerate/accumulate sound rather
nice.
04/13/05
Is the www.agnula.org site down?
No luck getting on last night or this morning. Has it moved?
I've recently purchased the 7 CDs for Debian 3.0 r4 and have done a
successful first install. I would like to get CDs for AGNULA/Demudi.
(I'm on a dialup connection.)
Any suggestions on where I can buy the AGNULA/Demudi CDs? Anyone want to
send me a set? If so, how much to cover your time and postage?
Thank you,
"The Other" Stephen Stubbs
Champaign, IL USA
hi everyone!
for those interested in linux audio development, the linux audio
conference 2005 (http://lac.zkm.de) at the center for arts and media in
karlsruhe/germany will be streamed live in both vorbis and theora formats.
the conference takes place from april 21 - 24, with lectures and
workshops from 11:00 to 18:00 UTC+2 every day and concerts in the evenings.
i would like to invite you to join us, either in person (attendance to
the conference is free) or remotely over the internet.
for remote participants of the conference, there is a chat room #lac2005
on irc.freenode.net. a chat operator will be present in the auditorium
in karlsruhe and will relay your questions to the lecturer and the local
audience. papers and slides will be made available for download in
advance if possible.
information about the streams and how to watch them is at
http://lac2005.zkm.de.
huge kudos to the icecast, ogg, vorbis and theora developers and
communites for their code and expertise!
kind regards,
jörn nettingsmeier
on behalf of the linux audio community
feel free to forward this message to interested parties.
Ok, I am building a machine from scratch to mix and record live music with
Ardour. Please look at my specs and offer any feedback.
Motherboard:
Asus K8N
http://usa.asus.com/products/mb/socket754/k8n/overview.htm
Processor:
AMD Athlon 64 (I havent decided on the speed, though price will play a factor
here. Probably the 3400.)
Ram:
2 1GB DDR400 PC3200 ram cards.
Hard Drive:
I am looking at 2 80GB 7200 RPM ATA drives to use in a RAID configuration, which
is apparently supported on the board. Any comments on this are welcomed!
CD Burner
I have a TEAC CD burner that I am planning on using. Its fast.
Ill use a 2 space rack case with a PCI and AGP riser cards. Ill probably just
get a cheap-o AGP video card if no one thinks it matters.
Audio I/O will be accomplished with the ST Audio DSP3000 with an additional
ADC&DAC3000 for a total of 16 channels of full duplex 24/96 I/O. Ill may add
a 3rd ADC&DAC3000 unit at some point.
Kernel:
I am thinking of using eh CCRMA FC3 i86_64 kernel if we think thats workable.
I have heard grumblings about AMD 64 and CCRMA. If its bad, Ill use Gentoo.
Any help here would be great.
Transportation:
6 or 8 space PA rack with shock mounts.
Control Surface:
This is an unanswered question as of now.
Video:
I am thinking of getting a rack video/keyboard deal like from a server room but
they seem really expensive. Any comments?
Thanks in advance for any feedback.
Matt