On Mon, May 18, 2009 at 5:36 AM, Crypto <crptdngl71(a)gmx.net> wrote:
What I would like to do in a first place is "simply" control MIDI
applications
that run on my notebook via these MIDI messages. Or, if you will say it like
that: I need a MIDI link from my MIDI organ to the applications running on my
notebook. The commands are sent after triggering/switching/moving the turning
knobs/pushbuttons/drawbars.
at LAC 2006 (? it could have been 2005 or even 2004) there was a
presentation of an app that converted MIDI into X Events, allowing
MIDI to be used to control any X Window application even if it did not
use MIDI itself. i don't know if this app is still available, or how
well it worked, though the demonstration certainly did. You could make
MIDI trigger arbitrary buttons on the screen, move knobs, faders etc.
i'm not much of an advocate of this kind of approach, but its worth
being aware of.
Keykit has other things that still need resolving (I
have found it cannot yet
handle more than one MIDI input on linux machines),
this is not true. I (re)wrote the linux MIDI support in KeyKit
specifically to support this. there is a readme file in the
distribution about how to do it.
I was stuck by the fact that an otherwise great
application like hydrogen is
unable to perform a simple thing such as playing a fill-in via MIDI, although
it offers plenty of ways to play all sorts of MIDI sequences (I compare a fill-
in to a sequence here). I know that hydrogen offers some commands such as
"start" and "stop", but that is not enough for what I would like to
do.
hydrogen is like Edward Scissorhands without the human hands he should have
received. hydrogen could do it if it only had a more advanced MIDI handling.
I think you are totally confused about what Hydrogen wants to be.