> Does anyone know of a (preferably command line) program to generate
> chord names from note values. I'd like to be able to type in something
> like:
>
> >> c d g
>
> and get back
>
> G major
>
> or something like that.
c + d + g = G major? ... "or something like that"? ;). Personally I
don't give a damn to the theory of harmony, however, there hopefully
isn't a CLI that answers "G major" to the question "c d g" :p.
Some sequencers provide this information. Dunno if those sequencers are
only Non-Linux-Sequencers, since I don't care about the theory of
harmony in that kind of way. However, test Rosegarden and Qtractor if
you should be able to use a GUI (no braille), perhaps one of them will
support chord detection. I suspect you already googled for a CLI able to
do this?!
Hi folks!
I'm about to order an Alesis iO2 Express interface, primarily for bass
practice and simple single-track recordings at home. I see that the
interface has a direct monitor path to route inputs to outputs without
latency. I would like to use this for my bass to practice with
headphones or stereo speakers.
Since the documentation doesn't tell much about the monitoring
capabilities, I'd like to know whether direct monitoring works when the
device only has bus power supplied, but not a real USB host. There are
very cheap USB power supplies available that just have the +5V and GND
pins connected.
Could someone with access to this kind of interface please confirm
whether the direct monitoring works with only USB bus power connected?
Or does anyone know of a different device with such "offline" capabilities?
Regards,
André
--
Greetings...
From: Andre Colomb <acolomb(a)schickhardt.org>
You asked for it (well, Helmut asked for it), you got it:
http://storage.restivo.org/music/Lahar/lahar-wizard.ogg
That's Better Than Lahar, live at Boom Boom Room, January 26, 2010.
The clav is a fluidsynth soundfont through Fons's auto-wah plugin. The Ozzy impression is me once again.
-ken
Hi everyone!
I purchased Livid Block controller a while back, and noticed that
there aren't pieces of software to run with it if you're in Linux. So
I took a Pure Data patch called Axiome, a mlr clone made to Monome
40h, and modified it to work with Livid Block. Because Block is
standard midi controller, Axiome kind of works with any midi
equipment. In practise it currently has Block-specific note values
hard coded, but I've made some tests to get it working even with an
ordinary midi keyboard.
Some cool features:
* Seven simultaneous loops
* Tempo independent pitch shift
* Midi learn (only for the channel gains at the moment)
* Automatic loop adjustment to the tempo
* Nice and easy to use GUI
So if you are Monome or Livid Block user, please check it out! It runs
on top of Pd-extended. Ubuntu 12.04 users should read a whole page
carefully in order to get Pd-extended running. (At least I had serious
problems when testing this in my Ubuntu box.)
http://heikki.ketoharju.info/axiome/
--
http://heikki.ketoharju.info
Cleaning out a hard drive, and found this atrocity from about 4 years ago:
http://storage.restivo.org/music/krmusic/semipublished/fairies-0.3.ogg
Made completely with Linux. Back from the days when remixes were in fashion.
It's a cover.
See if you can guess.
It kind of takes a long time to go anywhere, if you start to lose patience, just wait until a minute in.
-ken
Dave was kind enough to give me the session files to this great song, and I
happened to have a studio session cancel tonight, so I worked a bit on this
one. Let me know what you guys think! Done entirely in A3.
http://advancedbudgetstudios.com/clients/testbed/On_Board_The_Blues.mp3
--Jason
www.advancedbudgetstudios.com
On Mon, Jun 11, 2012 at 5:31 AM, Dave Phillips <dlphillips(a)woh.rr.com>wrote:
> Hi Fons, hi Jason :
>
> Okay, I've tarred the Ardour3 session, it's about 357 MB with all WAV
> files used in its production. It's up at :
>
> http://linux-sound.org/misc/**onboardtheblues.tar<http://linux-sound.org/misc/onboardtheblues.tar>
>
> I'd like to remove the tarball after you've downloaded it, so let me know
> when you have it. The material is extremely messy, you'll get an inside
> look at how I manage to make a passable purse out of a sow's ear. :) You
> may do as you wish with the session. Btw, it was created with a very recent
> version of A3 built from SVN sources.
>
> Best regards,
>
> dp
>
> Sorry of this sounds simplistic, but I haven't found the 'load'
> button in envy24control. I've saved a config using the 1st position,
> giving it a name, a pressing the 'save active profile', all under the
> profiles tab, but how to load it back ?
I never saw an answer to this come across the list, so just in case it
wasn't answered privately:
The profile number button automatically loads the profile when selected.
In other words, when you click the "1" button on the profiles tab, it
loads whatever information is associated with that profile. If you
change the settings and close the program without saving, when you select
the "1" button the older settings will be reloaded. If you change the
settings after that and select the "save" button, the changes will be
saved to the currently selected profile.
The man page implies you should be able to have the profile loaded at
startup by passing the profile number to the program, e.g. alsa24ctl 1 but
I have not verified that myself yet.
--
Chris Caudle
Hi Robin1
Thanks a lot for this answer. This sounds just perfect. I will have fun with
it tonight!
Warm regards
Julien
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Such Is Life: Very Intensely Adorable;
Free And Jubilating Amazement Revels, Dancing On - FLOWERS!
====== Find my music at ======
http://juliencoder.de/nama/music.html
.....................................
"If you live to be 100, I hope I live to be 100 minus 1 day,
so I never have to live without you." (Winnie the Pooh)
I am happy to announce the first test day for Fedora Jam on July 25th.
Fedora Jam is a new Fedora spin targeting audio creators and producers.
It includes a full set of lv2, dssi and ladspa plugins (and some
others). It also includes all of the most popular audio programs as
defualt, Ardour, Audacity, Bristol, Lilypond and MuseScore to mention
some. It comes configured with the JACK audio system be default and uses
KDE as it's desktop environment.
This will be an informal test day as the official test days for fedora
18 has not yet started, but we would like to have as many as possible
try it out and help with bug report, tips or just general comments to
help make this the best operating system for audio enthusiasts.
more info can be found on the fedora wiki[1] or by contacting me :)
[1]http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_jam
regards,
--
Jørn Lomax
GSoC atudent, Fedora audio Spin
CS Student University of Tromsø