Yes, there is a wealth of MIDI stuff in Linux, some a bit immature, most
getting better and better!
This is phenomenal!!, since most is pro-bono :-)
On Friday 20 February 2004 02:38, you wrote:
On Thursday 19 February 2004 17:27, David Baron
wrote:
2. MIDI post-processing. I use Ntonyx software to
process finished MIDI
sequences. This inserts controllers for more realistic playing style and
the results can be very good. Nothing of this ilk on Linux and not likely
to be--we are very accostumed to OpenSource and Gnu.
I would say that there are more tools for MIDI processing in Linux then in
Windows. In fact, that's what drove me to move to linux many years ago.
Common Music, PD, Csound, KeyKit all come to mind.
Understandably, you're probably lamenting the lack of an out-of-box
equivalent of whatever it is that Ntonyx does, more then a supposed lack
lack of MIDI post-processing apps in Linux, of which there are a great
many.
Larry Troxler