Hello all,
zita-njbridge 0.4.8 is now available at the usual place.
Changes:
* added --ipv4 and --ipv6 options
* removed some unused code
* some minor fixes
Ciao,
--
FA
I am currently considering setting "(Don't Fear) the Reaper" from Blue
Öyster Cult for accordion orchestra, and particularly because of the
complexity of the rather layered arrangement, that implies a lot of
transcription effort. I took a look at guitar tab sites and got quite a
few bits out for the guitar parts, but there is a lot of stuff missing
of course and need for writing stuff down.
So I dug around on the web to look for MIDI files and found a few ones
that were pretty solid (actually,…
[View More] astonishing in itself).
A few MIDI files clock in around 70kB and are likely obvious variations
of the same source. But I also found something in the 20kB range.
Now here is the thing: all of them, as accurate and detailed as they
appear otherwise, get the central guitar riff wrong. The second bar of
the central riff is a (broken) straight G major chord, g b d g. The
guitar tabs have it. The original single version has it (haven't found
other versions). Tutorials have it. But the Midi files invariably have
g c d g. All of them, the simple and more complex ones.
So I have two working theories: there is some other version of "(Don't
Fear) the Reaper". The other is that all MIDI files have a common
ancestor that got it wrong and never looked twice, in spite of very
meticulously transcribing all the solos.
--
David Kastrup
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Hey hey,
https://youtu.be/KMzCrc4cB1U
and for direct download:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/h0e6qhkkq2tzn9e/the_frozen_alone.ogg
It's again something different, a rather acoustic song. I know, it's more of a
preproduction sound. But I can't play a guitar to save my life. I did the best
I could with three guitars, some layering for the "minor" guitars, careful
playing and hopefully "plausible" writing. This is a song of unrequited love.
Most of it is LinuxSampler, trying out the ShinyGuitar, a …
[View More]free SFZ linked to
from the plogue website. They have a nice collection of instruments there,
both free and commercial. I had to edit the SFZ files a little to remove some
of the more fancy MIDI controls, which are usually served by some kind of GUI.
Hope you like it!
Best wishes,
Jeanette
--
* Website: http://juliencoder.de - for summer is a state of sound
* Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMS4rfGrTwz8W7jhC1Jnv7g
* Audiobombs: https://www.audiobombs.com/users/jeanette_c
* GitHub: https://github.com/jeanette-c
'Cause I don't have to feel the heat of the sun
To know it's shining on me every day <3
(Britney Spears)
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Dear LAUs,
tonight (March 26th 2021, 7pm CET) we will play a concert with five
musicians at four different locations, using our ovbox system.
Announcement and stream will be here: https://orlandoviols.com/
The complete production chain is FLOSS and running on Linux:
- remote music collaboration tool ovbox
(https://github.com/gisogrimm/ovbox/)
- TASCAR virtual acoustic simulator
(http://tascar.org/)
- blender game engine (with a patch for improvement of video textures)
(https://www.…
[View More]blender.org/)
- ardour for recording
(http://ardour.org/)
- OBS for streaming
(https://obsproject.com/)
- jack, to connect everything
(https://jackaudio.org/)
Thanks to all developers and the community!
The concert will be streamed via youtube.
Best,
Giso
Spatially separated, but still united in a virtual concert hall through
our newly developed device: the ovbox, we play consort music from the
English court of the 17th century.
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Hello all,
I just participated in this two hour album challenge here
<https://2hac.abstractionmusic.com/> and live-streamed a workflow I've
been playing with and wanted to share it. I used emacs with Common Music
2 (cm-incudine) to write the composition, and renoise and some plugins
to make and mix some of the audio. If you are interested in seeing how
this worked out, you can watch the live stream of it here
<https://youtu.be/INg7lqMifXY>. It was a lot of fun!
I still have …
[View More]to figure out how to sequence (events) with common music,
but I tried something with (progn) near the end to sequence them. I
still am going to just record the audio from the individual events into
a daw (maybe ardour) and sequence them like tape, but I wish I knew how
to sequence them in Common Lisp. Does anyone on here know?
Let me know what you think if you watch it!,
Brandon Hale
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Can anyone suggest a really simple MIDI sequencer, with no extra bells and
whistles, but just Alsa MIDI in, Alsa MIDI out, with piano roll type editing and
at least 16 tracks. Ideally, storage would also be standard MIDI files.
--
Will J Godfrey
https://willgodfrey.bandcamp.com/http://yoshimi.github.io
Say you have a poem and I have a tune.
Exchange them and we can both have a poem, a tune, and a song.
Hi,
I've gotten it into my head to try to try to decode some files from 30
years ago and see if I can extract enough MIDI -- and perhaps,
instrument modifications -- to be able to approximately recreate the
audio on Linux.
The files were created from a program I wrote and have long since
forgotten. Using the old Korg M1 manual, helpfully scanned in by Korg,
I've been able to determine that most of the files start with the
"exclusive header" and can be categorized as to which type of dump
…
[View More]they are. From there, I should be able to break apart the data.
However, I have a several files with the extension ".sng", which would
suggest "song", but the opening bytes are not the "exclusive header"
but rather, in hex are:
"00 10 00 3C" followed by a list of 16-byte ASCII strings containing
instrument names (followed, for a while by mostly 00000000 and/or
FFFFFFFF before getting to something a bit more variable)
Skimming through I also eventually see what appears to be a "song
title" in ASCII.
Is anyone familiar with what type of beasties these files are, and is
there a good spec for the format?
Thanks.
P.S. (I only had access to the M1's for one semester, and the code was
written on the school's Atari ST-1040, which I'd never seen before nor
have I used one since.)
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Hey hey,
something a little Vangelis SciFi soundtrack for a change:
https://youtu.be/ul570vi8W58
and for direct OGG download
https://www.dropbox.com/s/lehah6hzyqlhqda/from_the_starlight.ogg
On Linux I used Yoshimi for the big pad bass and Hexter for the high bell. As
this is a "sound per synth" setup, which could have been recorded live, once
the sequences were going, I used all my very synthetic hardware: Behringer
Neutron for bass, RD-8 for drums, Arturia MiniBrute 2 and Make Noise 0-…
[View More]Coast
for arpeggios, Waldoorf Microwave XT for the pad and DSI/Sequential Prophet-12
for the lead.
In the production there was just some EQ and compression to tame the sounds
and a healthy dose of reverb for the atmosphere. I think I ended up using
g2verb, since Ecasound and zita-reverb don't always get along.
Best wishes and enjoy,
Jeanette
--
* Website: http://juliencoder.de - for summer is a state of sound
* Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMS4rfGrTwz8W7jhC1Jnv7g
* Audiobombs: https://www.audiobombs.com/users/jeanette_c
* GitHub: https://github.com/jeanette-c
Give me a sign...
Hit me Baby one more time <3
(Britney Spears)
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