note that my m-audio keystation is not mentioned on alsa's web site, but
it works fine with snd-usb-audio module.... you should try it.
take a look here
http://www.alsa-project.org/alsa-doc/doc-php/template.php?company=Evolution…
bye
bobo
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Oggetto:
> [linux-audio-user] CME UF7 USB & ALSA
> Da:
> Josh Lawrence <hardbop200(a)gmail.com>
> Data:
> Fri, 27 Jan 2006 09:51:32 -0600
> A:
> A list for linux audio users <linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu>
>
> A:
> A list for linux audio users <linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu>
>
>
>Hello all,
>
>Sorry for the recent barrage of comments and questions from me. I
>appreciate all of the answers I have received thus far.
>
>One more question - regarding the relatively new CME UF7 USB/MIDI
>controllers, are they compatible with ALSA? By compatible I mean
>that, via USB, they are properly recognized and can be used
>immediately, much like the M-Audio stuff. I've done Google searches
>for CME + ALSA, and can't seem to find any information.
>
>Thank you,
>
>Josh
>
>--
>Josh Lawrence
>http://www.hardbop200.com
>
>
>
Finally decided to release something to the public.
http://lam.fugal.net/songs/show/150
Recorded mostly live with a bit of seq24 in the end.
Comments are welcome :)
BTW, Hans, thanks a lot for the site.
Regards,
Dmitry.
P.S. Server is offline 1am - 11am GMT+3
> 2. Re: Re: A bit of homemade music (Steve D)
> Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2005 19:08:02 -0700
> From: Steve D <groups(a)xscd.com>
>
> Thank you, Gavin, and also to Ron P. and James S. for your compliments
> and comments.
>
> And Gavin, I hope you post a few links to your music so that others on
> the LAU list can hear them. ;-)
>
Hi Steve,
Here is where about half of my electronic tracks reside:
http://stage.vitaminic.co.uk/main/gavin_stevens/all_tracks/
These tracks weren't made with Linux - they weren't even made on a
computer as such, just using my keyboard's onboard sequencer. They date
from 1990-1998.
I now have my digital piano back at home & I shall soon have everything
moved into our new extension at home. Then I hope to upload some of my
classical piano music & maybe do some new electronic music, all of which
definitely will be using Linux. I also have another album's worth of
tracks hanging around from the 1990s that I have never finished off
properly, so I hope to polish those up as well.
Anyway, for all who are interested, the Vitaminic site has plenty to be
going on with.
Gavin.
Hi list,
I have this Lexicon Omega Studio USB soundcard
(http://www.lexiconpro.com/Omega/index.asp).
I'm on Debian testing/unstable, kernel 2.6.15. The snd-usb-audio from
ALSA loads when I plug the card. I modified /etc/modprobe.d/sound to
look like:
alias snd-card-0 snd-intel8x0
options snd-intel8x0 index=0
alias snd-card-1 snd-usb-audio
options snd-usb-audio index=1
So that my USB device driver loads as a secondary soundcard.
The Lexicon Omega seems to be recognized by my system as it shows up in
menus of alsa compatible apps. Nevertheless it outputs no sound.
When I try to run $ alsamixer -c 1 it says "No mixer elems found"
Anyone has a clue?
Do these mixer elems have to be created?
I just feel it's going to work and it's even close from working (-:
++
Jé
Does anyone have any recommendations for a good parallel-port MIDI
interface that could be used under Debian/Alsa on a laptop? I'm open to
USB suggestions too, but honestly, my parallel port's not doing much.
--
+ Brent A. Busby, UNIX Systems Admin + "It's like being +
+ James Franck / Enrico Fermi Institute + blindsided by a +
+ The University of Chicago + flying dwarf..." +
Hello all,
Last night I was successful in installing and running VST instruments
with fst-1.7. I cannot begin to describe how excited I am to have
this working on Linux, and how appreciative I am to those responsible
for fst.
Now that I have it working, I need suggestions on a program. Is there
an app that will allow me to run multiple VSTi's assigned to different
MIDI channels? I'm thinking something along the lines of Cubase's
V-Stack or the Muse Receptor. I have an idea that one could just
launch multiple fst instances and do all of the connecting through
Jack, but that doesn't seem like the most elegant solution. And
besides, how would you assign different ones to different MIDI
channels?
Thanks for any help you can give.
--
Josh Lawrence
http://www.hardbop200.com
>Also a problem in 2.6.14. I am not using udev or devfs but have explicitely
>created /dev nodes (old fashioned way and far far too many entries, but ...
>always worked before).
>Newer kernels boot with many undefines. They seem to correspond to stuff in
>the sound core modules. Do I now need to explicitely load these or
>soundcore.ko on boot up (i.e. placing them in /etc/modules--somewhere along
>the line, snd_seq_midi had to be placed there!). Anybody doing this? (Guess
>it wouldn't hurt to try it.)
Easy enough -- didn't work. It is as if these modules are not exporting their
symbols correctly.
Also a problem in 2.6.14. I am not using udev or devfs but have explicitely
created /dev nodes (old fashioned way and far far too many entries, but ...
always worked before).
Newer kernels boot with many undefines. They seem to correspond to stuff in
the sound core modules. Do I now need to explicitely load these or
soundcore.ko on boot up (i.e. placing them in /etc/modules--somewhere along
the line, snd_seq_midi had to be placed there!). Anybody doing this? (Guess
it wouldn't hurt to try it.)
Quoting qb(a)f2s.com:
> However, when I exported to wav there was terrible clipping. A quick look
> in
> ReZound showed the problem: there was a mass of clips in the left hand
> track.
> Closer visual and aural inspection showed that the clipping is from the
> kick
> drum.
How did you export the track from Ardour? Did you use the "Export session to
audiofile" option?
If you did, you should check which tracks/buses you have selected for
exporting. If you use the master bus, you should export _only_ the master
bus outputs. Left output to the left export channel, right output to the
right export channel. Also, check the "Specific tracks" option to see that
nothing else is exported.
Sampo
I've got two PCs which I use mainly for watching video with MPlayer (for
various reasons Xine isn't so practical) and it has A/V sync problems on
them. I think it may be because my cheap & nasty sound cards lack some
feature that MPlayer relies on to sync properly:
<http://www.mplayerhq.hu/DOCS/HTML/en/audio.html#sync>. Unfortunately it
doesn't say exactly what the feature is and which are the bad drivers.
One of the PCs has a cheap sound card using the snd_cmipci driver and
the other has VIA onboard audio. The former also sometimes makes speech
sound a bit muffled I think.
I've heard of an "AC3 passthrough" feature. Does that mean the sound
card decodes the audio stream instead of the CPU? Although I don't have
a surround system ATM, I think it would be a nice feature to have in
case I install one later. Meanwhile, would AC3 passthrough work for
stereo AC3 streams?
So what would be a good card to get? I've heard that the Turtle Beach
Santa Cruz is supposed to be very good, and I know it is supported by
Linux, but I haven't been able to find out how well or whether it's
likely to fix the A/V sync. I should be able to get one (or two) on eBay
at a reasonable price.
--
TH * http://www.realh.co.uk