On Thu, 2007-03-15 at 20:45 +0100, Frank Barknecht wrote: > Hallo, > shift8 hat gesagt: // shift8 wrote: > > > are there any resources, books, etc out that approach the subject of > > dsp in a style like this? > > I think, without some abstraction (sic!) one wouldn't get far with Pd.
heh :) > It's just not a tool for ignoring certain rather abstract issues. > But I don't think you're looking for such a tool anyways. So for starters > I would recommend "Computer Music" by Dodge/Jerse. It doesn't > skip the necessary math, but has a good way of explaining it and > illustrating its use from a practical POV. sounds perfect - amazon i presume? cc would be dope tho... > It's definitly a book every > aspiring Pd user should read. I won't say the same of the "Computer > Music Tutorial", which IMO often is a bit to, uhm, referential: It's > very complete in its scope, but too often just directs you to a paper > or another book if you want to know the real details. And it's too > heavy to carry around in your bag. 'k > A personal favourite of mine then is F.R. Moore's "Elements of > Computer Music", but it doesn't fit your description. But I come back > to it again and again, while my CMT is collecting dust. ok, but i'm intrigued - i've almost always been a fan of your pd studies, and appreciate that often that's exactly what they are - illustrations of less then obvious techniques. this book inspires that to some extent? > Ciao l8 -- Mechanize something idiosyncratic. _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list
