I forgot to add, Bidule can act as a vst host or slave....it also runs in standalone.
Another suggestion would be eXT. It doesn't speak OSC, but it takes an extremely flexible and modular approach to audio/midi sequencing. At 39 euro, it is an amazing deal. Version 2 will be out soon so I'd suggest buying it now before the price is raised for the new version. Oh yeah, version two will be running on Linux as well!! Like Bidule, eXT can act as a vst host or slave, or can be operated in standalone mode. Version two is being released in 3 separate beta stages. It has a very warm and helpful community as well. Version 1: http://www.xt-hq.com/ Version 2: http://www.energy-xt.com/ Jared Dunne -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Cesare Marilungo Sent: Tuesday, December 05, 2006 2:10 AM To: Chris McCormick Cc: pd-list@iem.at Subject: Re: [PD] Midi sequencing Chris McCormick wrote: > On Tue, Dec 05, 2006 at 12:05:40AM +0000, Cesare Marilungo wrote: > >> I think it would be interesting to have some sort of OSC sequencer. I >> would love to compose with the same control over each note (or any other >> kind of event) you can have with csound scores but that can be edited >> visually. >> >> I love to use pure data to build instruments and effect, but at some >> point I want to expose all the parameters of my patch to OSC and use >> such kind of tool (some kind of OSC sequencer) to concentrate on >> composition/performance, mostly drawing and editing envelopes and maybe >> also triggering them in a generative fashion. >> > > Hi Cesare, > > It's definately possible to draw and edit envelopes and trigger them in > a generative fashion using the datastructures feature of Puredata. You > might like to check out Hans' work "solitude" and also there are various > GOP abstractions floating around which allow you to make/edit envelopes > with a mouse and save those envelopes' states between sessions in > various ways. > Yes. I knew about that and I've already experimented a bit with pd data structures and their graphical representation. But I was thinking about a more generic tool. Something to drive multiple sound generating softwares in the same session. The approach of using pd for everything is worth when you plan to release a piece as a patch. But I'd like to have a dedicated application with a more flexible gui to compose and control performances. Ciao, c. > Best, > > Chris. > > ------------------- > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://mccormick.cx > > > -- http://www.cesaremarilungo.com _______________________________________________ PD-list@iem.at mailing list UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list _______________________________________________ PD-list@iem.at mailing list UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list