Hi Atte,
I've used Csound alot in the past too. Mostly command line from Common Music which I
like alot. I'm trying to go more real-time though now. I just decided I would try
and get into PD!
How is your orchestra set-up. Do you have 1 synth per instrument per channel? I always
had a hard time in Csound as I wanted to have 1 synth per 16 channels and have them all
have their own set of presets. PD supports multiple midi ports so I thought that would
probably work, though learning another language will be tough as I know Csound well. I
also want the graphic routines, and as you know Csound dosen't have the Opengl stuff
in Linux, (yet). I also don't understand the status of Csound right now. Is anyone
actually working on coding Csound5? I'm on the lists but can't tell.
Thanks,
Ken
-----Original Message-----
From: Atte Andr? Jensen <atte(a)ballbreaker.dk>
Sent: Sep 15, 2003 8:47 AM
To: linux-audio-user(a)music.columbia.edu
Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] Linux synths
On Mon, 15 Sep 2003 07:44:23 -0700 (GMT-07:00)
Ken Locarnini <renueden(a)earthlink.net> wrote:
I'm happy to be back after about 2 years away from
Linux. The
audio/music world seems to be taking off and thats great.
Indeed!
I'd like some general comments on what would be
peoples favorite
reactor type synth in Linux as of now. I'm primarily interested in
realtime, multi timbral midi controlled synths.
I simply love csound. It's flexible, powerful, stable and well
documented. I know that some (most?) people find the fact that it's text
based a minus, but I don't agree. After working with pd intensely for a
couple of weeks I realized that I work much faster in csound.
I'm running csound under debian/unstable on kernel 2.6.0-test5 with a
csound buffersize of 128 on a PIV 2400 laptop, using Evolution USB
keyboards as controllers. I have more polyphony in real time than I can
use with two hands for "normal" (subtractive, fm, sample playback,
soundfont playback, additive) patches. This is even with a few global FX
units (chorus, delay and rotary speaker) running all the time.
The only not-so-nice thing about csound is that I didn't manage (or try
that hard, actually) to make it run alongside other sound-producing
applications, including jack, pd or fluidsynth. Could be a problem if
you want to use LADSPA plugins or do hd-recording...
How about sequencers?
I didn't work much with sequencers under linux, but FWIW I've settled on
Muse. Needless to say it's quite simple to route midi events from Muse
to csound.
--
peace, love & harmony
Atte