This is Steinway_IMIS soundfont, version 2.2.
ftp://musix.ourproject.org/pub/musix/sf2/Steinway_IMIS2.2
This version fixes the issue with loops. I hope this is the good one
and there are no more remaining major bugs.
Marcos is a little busy right now, so he asked me to make this fix. He
is thinking to make other improvements, so expect more updates soon.
Hello,
Does anyone know of a good plugin that will generate subharmonics?
I would like to put a little more low frequency "oomph" into my bass
track. Preferrable LADSPA, but VST would work, too.
Thanks for any help!
-TimH
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This is the AZR3 plugin, being played live, using the Elven LV2 host:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNmU_XXQShc
The laptop is to the image left, off-camera. There was an actual real Hammond B3 sitting there at this club... and I was given permission to use it, but I had all my other patches set up on my laptop, so I stuck with what I know works.
- -ken
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I'm starting to enjoy glitchy percussion sounds I'm hearing in a lot of computer music these days, and want to experiment with those.
I've asked around about how people are making these sounds, and the answers I get are "Battery", "Redrum", and "Reason". All firmly wedged closed and proprietary. of course.
Are there any good free tools for making glitchy drum sounds, which do not require the use of WINE? If the answer to that is "SC/CSound/PD/ChucK", that's fantastic, can anyone point me to some particularly good source code or patches for glitchy drums in those languages that I could start experimenting with?
Thanks.
- -ken
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PHASEX-0.11.1 contains fixes for the segfault issues some users have
seen with version 0.11.0. Special thanks goes to Adam Sampson for
tracking this down, and to the rest of you who sent in bug reports.
Upgrading to 0.11.1 is recommended for all users, since it appears
that this bug will corrupt memory used by the synth engine even if
it doesn't trigger a segfault.
As usual, source tarballs and FC6 RPMs (src, i386, i686, and athlon)
are available at:
http://sysex.net/phasex
Thank you for your continued support. Here's to happy music-making
under Linux!
Cheers,
--ww
--
/* William Weston <weston(a)sysex.net> */
Hello,
After some big issues with my integrated firewire port on my laptop, using a
Presonus Firebox sound card, I am thinking about buy an ExpressCard. But I
an not an expert. So I would like some advices choosing a good chip.
Seeking on the Internet I have found some ExpressCard with Texas Instruments
chips or belkin chip... Are they good ones ?
Thanks for your help
Mysth-R
Hm, my reply to munging got damaged there!
Kurzweil developed a box to do this, I think as a project after selling his company to Young Chang. It was just such a PLL that would sync to the drummer so that the massively overproduced garange bands could play their music live, something that was impossible without miming the whole act. Basically the drummer would lead the tempo (some are notoriously bad at following a set tempo anyway), from that the software would derive a MIDI time code and away it went to drive the sequencers.
Not sure if it caught on or even worked. Firstly garage bands became more popular than overproduced, resampled and sync'ed music, but it never worked very well with extended endings as the sequencers would become confused - they understood if the drummer wanted to change the speed for mood, or for lack of drumming abilities, however if they wanted to play an extra chorus it kind of fell apart.
Have not heard of any open source examples, but, as Fons says, it is possible and would be an interesting project.
If it was not Kurzweil I am certain somebody can give a pointer in the right direction.
Nick.> Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2007 00:04:08 +0200> From: fons(a)kokkinizita.net> To: linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org> Subject: Re: [LAU] Progressive Quantisation> > On Tue, Aug 21, 2007 at 10:01:16PM +0100, Folderol wrote:> > > What I would like to see is quantisation algorythm the detects trends> > rather than absolute values, then progressively applies small> > corrections to keep overall timing correct. (it would of course have to> > operate over all tracks simultaneously).> > A PLL (phase locked loop) or DLL (delay locked loop) will do exactly that:> follow the general trend and ignore local variations. Neither of them is> difficult to program, but you'll need a good grasp of the theory to make> them work,> > There are mixed open/closed loop algorithms to do this as well. They can> work even better sometimes, but there's very little 'open' information> available on those.> > -- > FA> > Follie! Follie! Delirio vano è questo !> > > _______________________________________________> Linux-audio-user mailing list> Linux-audio-user(a)lists.linuxaudio.org> http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/linux-audio-user
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Mammut 0.60
===========
Mammut will FFT your sound in one single gigantic analysis (no windows).
These spectral data, where the development in time is incorporated in
mysterious ways, may then be transformed by different algorithms prior to
resynthesis. An interesting aspect of Mammut is its completely
non-intuitive sound transformation approach.
*Homepage:
http://www.notam02.no/arkiv/doc/mammut/
*Screenshot:
http://www.notam02.no/arkiv/doc/mammut/mammut.png
Changes 0.59 -> 0.60
-Updated source to work with Juce 1.44. (later or earlier versions of
juce might not work with this version of mammut)
-Fixed a couple of ugly bugs in the progress bar code.
-Set moving camera to be off by default. Moving camera seems to stall
mammut when using newer juce's. :-(
Snd-ls v0.9.8.1_beta
====================
Snd-ls is a distribution of Bill Schottstaedt's sound editor SND.
Its target is people that don't know scheme very well, and don't want
to spend too much time configuring Snd. It can also serve
as a quick introduction to Snd and how it can be set up.
(Its named beta, because it hasn't been tested that much. But I think it
should work very well. However, a new non-beta version is going to be
released quite soon with some additional fixes.)
Changes 0.9.7.12 -> 0.9.8.1_beta
-Fixed bug that caused snd to fail starting if no previously used
soundfile was opened during startup.
-Updated Snd from 8.4/12.9.2006 to 9.3/30.7.2007. Many important fixes.
-Another attempt at fixing the rt_readin_tag startup bug.
Download from http://www.notam02.no/arkiv/src/snd/
Hi folks,
The following has nothing to do with audio, or even with Linux per se,
but I think of you as the right sort of people to be interested in
something like this :-) Feel free to write me off-list and we can take
the discussion elsewhere.
I've been programming professionally for about 8 years. I'm
self-taught. Lately I've been wishing I had a better grasp of computer
science fundamentals, but I can't afford the time or money to attend a
degree program. But hey, MIT has most of their academic materials
online for free - including textbooks, class notes, and lecture
videos!
The problem with doing it alone in my spare time is that there are too
many other things competing for my attention. I think it would help a
lot to have an online discussion group - a group that commits to
finish* a given course in a certain number of weeks, and can help each
other stay motivated, and help each other with difficult concepts,
etc. By "finish" I mean: watch every lecture, read the texts, and
complete every assignment.
Is anybody else interested in something like that?
I'd propose to start at the beginning, with the introductory scheme
course:
http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Electrical-Engineering-and-Computer-Science/6-001…
(btw, I got this idea from hearing about some people doing something similar
with Knuth's "Art of Computer Programming" books. but of course now I
can't find a relevant link.)
--
Paul Winkler
http://www.slinkp.com
Hi folks,
I have a video cd. Somehow, KDE was giving me problems with it, but I ripped
it using K3b and now I have the mpeg file. I want to rip out a certain song
from the video and convert it to mp3/ogg etc. How would I be able to do this?
TIA.
--
----------------------------------------
Mrugesh Karnik
GPG Key 0xBA6F1DA8
Public key on http://wwwkeys.pgp.net
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