On Mon, 21 Feb, 2005 at 12:14PM +0200, Tapio Kelloniemi spake thus:
Hi all
My question appears here most likely quite often, but I think I ask
anyway since googling the Internet did not give any useful results.
I'm searching for tools for serious music compositon. I don't want to
generate some poor PC speaker noise, but something that sounds good. I
don't care much whatever the method of generating the music is. Using
a midi sequencer with soft synth or writing my compositions in a
musical language are both OK, I can even use a tracker if the sound
quality and ability to fine-tune everything are not
compromised. Productivity is also an important factor since writing
1000 lines of code to get a single note out from soundcard is not
worth the
effort. The only (and probably the one which makes all this impossible) is that
I'm blind and can only use text-based applications. So I'm interested
about all possibilities available.
I'm sure you'll get plenty of pointers through this list.
My suggestion is supercollider. I haven't tried it, but I hear good
reports and I'm sure the linux implementation takes etxt files as
input. I could be wrong. The url is
http://www.audiosynth.com/
As a blind linux audio user, you're in a minority in a minority in a
minority. I don't think anyone has ever looked into this side of
things, or if they have they haven't documented it. So if you have
the time and inclination, writing up your findings could make entry
into linux audio orders of magnitude simpler for people that follow.
Just a suggestion.
James
Thanks a lot for all answers.
--
"I'd crawl over an acre of 'Visual This++' and 'Integrated
Development
That' to get to gcc, Emacs, and gdb. Thank you."
(By Vance Petree, Virginia Power)