Ian, as an excellent musician, is making the big important point here ... that
musical time is not about integer ratios.
It is often wrongly taught that way, but it is actually about meaning,
pulse, emphasis, and phrasing.
Musical notation is not a program to be followed literally, but hints
On 5/16/2011 9:22 PM, Ian Piumarta wrote:
Dear Josh,
Thanks for posting this!
Thought you guys would get a kick out of this YAML-WAV sequencer written in
Ruby:
https://github.com/jstrait/beats
I think this is pretty cool. (It puts us well on the way to archiving the
entire output of
Cool! I've been hoping to see some more multimedia stuff happen for Ruby,
and I actually like the little DSL they've got going there: it's very
visual, and a grid is perfect when what you're emulating is a drum machine
which usually has a grid interface or some such, and doesn't know about
inexact
I really liked the idea mentioned on hacker news of using a numeric
value in place of the x to indicate velocity. I am going to mess
around with a really simple web interface for this over the weekend.
On 5/17/11, Casey Ransberger casey.obrie...@gmail.com wrote:
Cool! I've been hoping to see
On 18/05/2011, at 8:06 AM, Casey Ransberger wrote:
Here's something ironic: we've instead focused on ways to *correct* human
error in music. Pitch correction for your vocals, but don't use too much, or
you'll sound like a fax machine (unless that's what you're going for, in
which case you
The 10th International Conference on Creating,
Connecting and Collaborating through Computing (C5 2012)
18-20 January 2012
Playa Vista, CA USA
http://www.cm.is.ritsumei.ac.jp/c5-12/
Hosted by the USC