Yes, Grace is built in JUCE.  Actually Its not hard to load plugins directly 
into juce, if you did that you could route your midi to your plugins without 
needing an external app.
I have

On Feb 28, 2020, at 9:55 AM, Iain Duncan 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

So much good stuff to dig into on this thread! :-)

Rick, I noticed in the S7 docs there was a mention of your name on "S7 in 
JUCE". Did you use JUCE for Grace? I ask as it's on my to-evaluate list for 
some advanced ear training software I'd like to build with S7.  (Jazz ear 
training software,  at a high enough level of sophistication, starts to look 
like algo composition if you squint a little.)

iain

On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 6:31 AM Taube, Heinrich K 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

On Feb 28, 2020, at 6:44 AM, Michael Gogins 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

> I see the Grace documentation lists a bunch of functions/macros related to 
> algo music, but it's not clear to me whether Grace is required to get that 
> functionality.
>
> My application is to algorithmically generate midi to be played by virtual 
> instruments. (i.e., route the midi to a VST or AU host.)
>

Grace is a C++ app that contains a real time scheduler, s7 scheme, and a scheme 
version of common music.  You would develop your programs in scheme (or Sal) 
and you can run them in realtime to send MIDI or OSC to external programs. you 
can also use bill’s own s7 scheme binding to sndlib to generate audio files 
algorithmically.
—Rick

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