2010/9/23 Niels Mayer <[email protected]>: > Following a wikipedia link on karplus-strong synthesis posted > recently, I found this, which appears to be the online fount of all > knowledge for physical modelling and sound synthesis: > https://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/pasp/ > (with links to examples, code, etc). > >> PHYSICAL AUDIO SIGNAL PROCESSING >> FOR VIRTUAL MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND AUDIO EFFECTS >> JULIUS O. SMITH III >> Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA) >> Department of Music, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305 USA > > I figure someone will find this interesting. Plus it's cheaper than > buying the book:
I recently (last friday) got my MSc graduation with a thesis on physics-based (a.k.a. physical) modeling for sound processing and was just about to post a link on this mailing list. http://naspro.atheme.org/public/mt_dangelo.pdf It contains a (not very deep) theoretical introduction to physics-based modeling, cites some free/open source projects such as FAUST, JACK, LV2, Ingen, etc., describes a new FAUST-like (conceptually but not syntactically) programming language for the task called Permafrost, whose compiler I released under a BSD license - it generates LV2 plugins, and in the end a concrete use case is examined by developing a tube amplifier simulator (the whole source code is included in an appendix). The "Linux Audio community", and especially some people infesting this list ;-), is also listed in the acknowledgements, so I take the opportunity to thank you all for having helped me learning so many things about audio processing in these years, either through normal discussion or flames. Best regards, Stefano _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
