Hey hey,
not sure, if this is welcome, but I just uploaded a new free soundset for the
DSI Prophet 12 hybrid synthesizer. It's a superb hardware instrument. Feel
free to pass the links along!
http://freeshell.de/~silvain/p12_fs1_soundset.ziphttp://freeshell.de/~silvain/p12_fs2_soundset.zip
The first is a revision of the already existing soundset on my website. Both
soundsets now upload to any of the 8 soundbanks of the Prophet 12.
Enjoy and nice weekend!
Ta-ta
----
Ffanci
* Internet: http://freeshell.de/~silvain
Hi,
See below for my contribution to Linux audio poetry, reflections of
personal struggle ;-)
Thanks to all Linux audio developers and supporters for all the great
software, I hope no one feels offended or ridiculed by the lyrics.
Thanks,
Kees
X-run blues (battle hymn of Linux audio newbies)
----------------
I woke up early one morning, I got me the X-run blues
I woke up early one morning, I got me the X-run blues
Must've missed a couple of warnings, and I don't have any clues
I was all set to record, enter the X-run blues
I was really ready to record, enter the X-run blues
Could be the cpufreq, or them funny IRQs
I started googling for advice on lower latency
I started googling for advice on lower latency
It said 'Compile yourself a realtime kernel, son, and you just wait and
see'
I switched to Ardour III, I paid my Ardour dues
I switched to Ardour III, I paid my Ardour dues
Tried all of the Jack flavors, can't lose the X-run blues
I developed 'X' paranoia, Xubuntu's where I'm at
I developed 'X' paranoia, the worst I ever had
Would switching to Fedora get me F-runs instead
Lately I don't care too much, though there's lots of things to check
Right now I don't care too much, lots of settings still to check
I like the vintage pops and crackles, just like a Robert Johnson track
Anyone interested in beta-testing this please let me know.
Zita-njbridge
-------------
Command line Jack clients to transmit full quality
multichannel audio over a local IP network, with
adaptive resampling at the receiver.
Main features:
* One-to-one (UDP) or one-to-many (multicast).
* Sender and receiver(s) can each have their own
sample rate and period size.
* Up to 64 channels, 16 or 24 bit or float samples.
* Receiver(s) can select any combination of channels.
* Low latency, optional additional buffering.
* High quality jitter-free resampling.
* Graceful handling of xruns, skipped cycles, lost
packets and freewheeling.
* IP6 fully supported.
* Requires zita-resampler, no other dependencies.
Note that this version is meant for use on a *local*
network. It may work or not on the wider internet if
receiver(s) are configured for additional buffering,
and if you are lucky. The current code will replace
any gaps in the audio stream by silence, and does not
attempt to re-insert packets that arrive out of order.
You will need a fairly recent Jack version, as the
code uses jack_get_cycle_times() and no fallback for
that is provided.
Ciao,
--
FA
A world of exhaustive, reliable metadata would be an utopia.
It's also a pipe-dream, founded on self-delusion, nerd hubris
and hysterically inflated market opportunities. (Cory Doctorow)
Hey,
Is anyone achieving significant audio latency gains or xrun stability using a RT kernel with Kxstudio or similar Ubuntu studio distro's?
If so, which kernel / where /do I gotta roll my own?
Thanks!
~ Russell
Hi,
today we have published the video of another single of John Option: You
fill my soul. Of course the song is published under the terms of the
Creative Commons License (CC-BY-SA) and it's completely produced only
with free software: Ardour, Hydrogen, Jack, Qsynth, CALF, and many other
great free audio software that we used under Debian GNU/Linux.
Here you can listen the single: http://youtu.be/0hwTZgo808E
As for the previous song we have done a little more in the direction of
freedom and we published in our website[1] the single recording tracks
and the complete Ardour session. All this material is published under
the terms of the Creative Commons license Attribution Share alike so
that anyone can use our tracks to produce a remix of our song or even a
new song that have to be published under the same license.
You can find all about our project here: http://johnoption.org
I hope that you like our choice of freedom. If you feel like I'd love
to read your feedback, because the encouragement of the people who
listen to us and appreciate the philosophy of our project is the only fuel
for us to continue. And if you like to be updated about our next
release, please subscribe to our YouTube channel or any other social
network you like (see link to our profiles on our website[1]).
Best regards,
Max-B
1. http://johnoption.org
--
IM: massimo(a)jabber.fsfe.org - GnuPG Public Key-Id: 0x5D168FC1
Hi,
since S/PDIF is consumer class people are used to connect S/PDIF devices
and I assume everything will work without the need to care about
something else.
S/PDIF usually isn't used for audio production, this might explain why
people tend to forget to set up the clock source. AFAIK there's no need
to care about it, when using stand alone consumer devices.
I suspect that sync very often is the culprit, when S/PDIF used with
prosumer or pro-audio devices doesn't work.
Since I'm not using S/PDIF I ask somebody using it, to write a Linux
audio Wiki that mentions to set up the master clock manually.
2 Cents,
Ralf
I was playing around with trying to use a Pi as a synth.
So far so good except for two problems:
1) I've run into this:
http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.audio.jackit/26263
But I'm already using jackd2_1.9.8~dfsg.4+20120529git007cdc37-5+fixed1~raspbian1_armhf.deb
which supposedly has Dbus removed/excised/banished/purged/kicked-to-the-curb.
And yet, no dice, same error. Haven't had time to investigate it yet.
I went back to jackd1 (wow, it's like it's 2007 all over again).
2) The sound coming out of either the built-in audio or an external C-Media USB interface
is cracking and nasty, with obvious aliasing distortion. Any ideas why? I've tried
44.1k and 48k. No xruns tho, which is nice, at 44100/512/3 using jackd1 and fluidsynth.
I've got it overclocked to 1Ghz, all is well with that (ran the self-test), and
using the performance guv'na.
I haven't tried with my FastTrack Pro yet because the Pi can't power it at the
same time as a MIDI keyboard, and a working power cube for the keyboard has gone missing.
The crackling/aliased sound is the big stumbling block though. Any ideas?
-ken
2014-06-11 9:39 GMT-03:00, Aiyumi Moriya <aiyumi.br(a)gmail.com>:
> 2014-05-26 1:30 GMT-03:00, Danni Coy <danni.coy(a)gmail.com>:
>> I have had some luck with Kontact and festige
>
> Really? :D That got my hopes up.
>
> Does the free Kontakt 5 Player also work under Wine? There's this
> violin sample library that I'm interested for quite a while now:
>
> http://embertone.com/instruments/friedlanderviolin.php
>
> It is a solo violin library, but it also has an "ensemble" mode. I
> really liked the sound... But It runs on Kontakt Player. I googled
> about Kontakt 5 Player on Linux/Wine and didn't find anything useful.
> Also, from what I understood from some reading, it seems to use a
> software called Continuata for watermarking and downloading the
> library. I've never heard of it before - I'm a beginner in the area of
> (proprietary) sample libraries -, but from the forum posts I read, it
> seems to require the user to install a "Continuata utility program"
> that downloads and extracts the library. The posts I read were this
> one:
>
> http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=5448245
>
> and the one directly below it.
>
> But I googled about it too, and found a post about someone downloading
> (not specifically this sample library) normally via the browser
> without using the Continuata thing.
>
> http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=376934
>
> Does that mean it isn't required, and only the developers need to use
> it to watermark/upload or something? If it's really required, any idea
> if that works under Wine?
>
> The library is on sale right now, costing $99 USD until June 15th
> (before, it was $110), and I'm seriously considering buying it. I just
> would like some confirmation if it can work under Wine, even if JACK
> doesn't work and I have to use an external hardware recorder to
> capture the speaker outputs or something. :P
Yes, I'm still that desperate after this sample library. I'll trust
the message that got my hopes up, hinting that Kontakt works on Wine.
I decided to take the risk and bought the library. If all else fails,
I can resort to my Windows partition, I guess (though I sincerely hope
I won't need to do that. I really wanted to use this string library,
and really wanted it to be on Linux :D ).
Soon after the purchase, I got an email with the serial code, saying:
> You can begin downloading right away. First, please install the latest
> version of the Continuata Connect Download utility, our high-speed library
> downloader, using the link below.
>
> http://continuata.net/download_app.php
>
> Just click the icon for your OS (PC or Mac - 64-bit OSX only). Once you've
> downloaded and installed the Connect utility, run it and then copy-paste
> your Download Code directly into the download code box, using the Paste
> button.
So, no download links. Using the app is really required... We have to
install the app and paste the serial code into it, which it uses to
identify and retrieve the file.
I downloaded the Continuata Connect app and installed it through Wine.
There was a "couldn't create directory" error at the end of the
installation, but the program seems to run okay. I pasted the serial
code into the program and it began downloading. The first file part
went fine, but from the second part it decided to stop downloading
every now and then, corrupting the file, then starting all over again.
I don't know if that's supposed to be normal, but I don't believe it
to be a Linux or Wine issue.
Although I'm still stuck on the second file part, it seems it has
chances of working, so I'll keep trying. If (no, "when") I get past
the download issue, the next step is trying to install Kontakt Player.
I'll post again when I have more news.
PS: at the end of the email, they say:
> If you can't install for whatever reason, get in touch and we'll get you up
> and running as soon as humanly possible.
I wonder if the "whatever reason" also includes "because I'm trying to
run it on Linux", hahahaha :P. Jokes aside, if it indeed does work on
Wine, letting them know might be a good idea too.
--
____________________
Blog: http://aiyumi.warpstar.net/