Gene Hesket wrote:
>> Some of you may be interested in a fresh slice of "The Saints Go Marching
>> in" from the "Pixel Land Jazz Ensemble" as arranged by Dr Richard
>> Marschall
>>
>> https://soundcloud.com/kotau/final-saints-48khz
>>
> I thought this one was worth listening too, and on balance it was.
> Nicely creative but a bit slower paced than the Saints would normally
> be. Rather than the rousing march it usually is, it gives the
> impression of just slowly ambling down the street. Solo work from
> around the 4 minute mark on was nicely highlighted. Thank you.
Thanks Gene, I agree that the main section has a tighter feel to it and
the "Pixel Land Jazz Ensemble" comes together well at that point but I
hope you'll have another listen to the lead in again. It's Actually more
Impressive than the main section from several aspects ;-)
>
> You can hear this track and others on the LCRM jazz stream:
>
> http://lowcostrestaurantmusic.com
>
--
Patrick Shirkey
Boost Hardware Ltd
Hi,
Some of you may be interested in a fresh slice of "The Saints Go Marching
in" from the "Pixel Land Jazz Ensemble" as arranged by Dr Richard
Marschall
https://soundcloud.com/kotau/final-saints-48khz
You can hear this track and others on the LCRM jazz stream:
http://lowcostrestaurantmusic.com
--
Patrick Shirkey
Boost Hardware Ltd
On 04/16/2015 11:24 AM, Raffaele Morelli wrote:
>> NB: Couldn't find the config for multicore support in the kernel, hints?
>
> CONFIG_SMP
Got it, thanks!
--
Atte
http://atte.dkhttp://a773.dk
Hi
I compiled 4.0, seems to work fine, however jack audio breaks up, and my
quadcore is only running on one core (only one cpu listed in
/proc/cpuinfo). I suspect the two to be related.
Any thoughts? Others running on 4.0? Special things to think about?
NB: Couldn't find the config for multicore support in the kernel, hints?
--
Atte
http://atte.dkhttp://a773.dk
hi all,
every year the post-lac nostalgic syndrome gets its toll...
all the photos taken by this lousy photo-shooter of yours during the
lac2015@jgu-mainz are now online:
http://www.rncbc.org/lac2015
the even lousier videos taken from some of the linux sound night live
acts are also delivered unedited and online:
http://www.youtube.com/user/rncbchannel
enjoy
--
rncbc aka. Rui Nuno Capela
Hi everyone,
I'm back from LAC2015 and I just subscribed to the LAU mailing list. I'd like
to quickly introduce myself to those I haven't met at LAC2015.
I'm a physicist and I work as a PhD student at the Third Institute of Physics
(DPI) in Göttingen, Germany. My main topic is 'Laser-induced cavitation
bubbles'.
I started using Linux in 1997 and work as a system administrator since many
years. In my free time I play the piano and the drums, and I use Linux audio
software occasionally for hard-disk recording or playing soft synths via a
MIDI keyboard. I also use the Commodore 64 to produce electronic music.
I really enjoyed the conference and learned a lot.
Cheers,
Hendrik
Yahoo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
----- Original Message -----
> From: "Will Godfrey" <willgodfrey(a)musically.me.uk>
> To: linux-audio-announce(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
> Sent: Monday, March 30, 2015 8:30:23 PM
> Subject: [LAA] Could there be a better day?
>
> ... cos today we release Yoshimi V 1.3.4
>
> --
> Will J Godfrey
> http://www.musically.me.uk
> Say you have a poem and I have a tune.
> Exchange them and we can both have a poem, a tune, and a song.
> _______________________________________________
> Linux-audio-announce mailing list
> Linux-audio-announce(a)lists.linuxaudio.org
> http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-announce
>
--
Jonathan E. Brickman | jeb(a)ponderworthy.com | (785)233-9977
Ponderworthy | http://ponderworthy.com
Music of compassion; fire, and life!!!
Hi all,
Ever dream of maintaining GNU/Linux servers and providing support for a
closely knit community of users interested in everything related to
sound, music and DSP? Designing high performance GNU/Linux-based
workstations that are completely silent? Packaging your favorite free
software so that users worldwide can easily download and install it?
Designing, maintaining, managing and deploying complex multichannel
studio and concert diffusion systems? Working with a community of
interdisciplinary students, researchers and faculty from all over the
world? Doing some music and research on the side? (and more, of course).
And all that at CCRMA, the Center for Computer Research in Music and
Acoustics in the middle of Silicon Valley?
And working with Nando?[*] (well, nothing's perfect :-)
Details are here:
https://stanfordcareers.stanford.edu/job-search?jobId=66452
Just in case you don't know, the Stanford Center for Computer Research
in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) is a multi-disciplinary facility where
composers and researchers work together using computer-based technology
both as an artistic medium and as a research tool.
https://ccrma.stanford.edu/about
Waiting for applications...
-- Fernando
[*] https://ccrma.stanford.edu/~nando/
Hello,
Has anyone here used "spyder" https://github.com/spyder-ide/spyder
for audio file data analysis, manipulation or algorithm development?
If so, was your experience with spyder productive?
What I'm *NOT* looking for are point tools. I know about, and
have used, many a tool to create time plots, spectrograms, and
frequency plots. My motivation is to learn a bit more about
audio processing theory, and I'm looking for tools that will help
me explore. What piqued my interest was last year's March issue
of IEEE Signal Processing Magazine. For instance, there's a fun
article on melody extraction from polyphonic audio at this link:
https://www.ee.columbia.edu/~dpwe/pubs/SalGER14-melody.pdf
Thanks.
PS: http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/developing-your-own-scientific-python-c…
--
Kevin