carmen wrote:
Freewheeling is *so* unlike Live its hard to even link the two. Just for
a start, Live is organized around a timeline, Freewheeling is not.

Live does have a freewheeling mode.where you can basically turn on and off 
loops and fx, McMusic style. you can record the actions in this mode, and view 
them on the timeline..

Yes, and don't forget the session interface organized like a spreadsheet (rows = scenes, columns = instruments, cells = MIDI or audio clips) which works just great both for live improvisation and experimental compositional work. Might also be neat to have something like this as a frontend for SuperCollider, where the clips may be snippets of SC code to be executed...

BTW, regarding the original question: SuperCollider might well be the realtime audio engine you're looking for, it's programmable and extensible (via plugins) and thus very versatile. And it's controlled via OSC. Of course you'll have to add the necessary plugins to do the time stretching/pitch shifting stuff... ;-)

Anyway, having something like Ableton Live on Linux would be a great boon, it's the one single program that I still run Windows for. But IMHO recreating that from scratch as open source for Linux is a HUGE project, something of the order of Ardour's complexity. It might be a better idea to add full MIDI support to Ardour and work on the internal data structures so that a session/freewheeling interface could be added to it. (If that's even possible, Paul didn't seem to think that the current architecture would support this when we discussed this question at last year's LAC.)

Albert

--
Dr. Albert Gr"af
Dept. of Music-Informatics, University of Mainz, Germany
Email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
WWW:    http://www.musikinformatik.uni-mainz.de/ag

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