Re: [haskell art] [Haskell-cafe] the library of beautiful instruments implemented in haskell / csound

2015-09-14 Thread amindfv
Oh interesting! I had thought CSound didn't do realtime synthesis.

tom


El Sep 14, 2015, a las 6:15, Anton Kholomiov  
escribió:

> It's all was played live with Csound triggered by midi keyboard and recorded 
> with Audacity (connected to csound output with Jack)
> 
> 2015-09-14 13:11 GMT+03:00 Anton Kholomiov :
>> Thanks for feedback. I've used several sources on sound design:
>> 
>> Ian McCurdy collection of csound instruments: 
>> http://iainmccurdy.org/csound.html
>> 
>> Thor demystified series by Gordon Reid: 
>> https://www.propellerheads.se/substance/discovering-reason/index.cfm?article=part19=get_article
>> 
>> Csound pieces from Csound Catalog: http://www.csounds.com/csound-catalog/
>> 
>> Olav Basoski course: https://www.macprovideo.com/tutorial/live8402
>> 
>> Sound on sound synth secrets: 
>> http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/allsynthsecrets.htm
>> 
>> Risset' Amsterdam Collection of Csound Instruments: 
>> http://www.codemist.co.uk/AmsterdamCatalog/
>> 
>> It's mostly Iain McCurdy instruments, thor demystified series, and 
>> instruments from various pieces 
>> by Csounders (Csound catalog)
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 2015-09-14 0:38 GMT+03:00 Tom Murphy :
>>> These sound great, congratulations! "Batteries included" is a great place 
>>> to be. Can you point to references you used to create the instrument 
>>> definitions?
>>> 
>>> Tom
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Sun, Sep 13, 2015 at 9:13 AM, Anton Kholomiov 
>>>  wrote:
 Status update for my haskell synth csound-expression. The main point is 
 presence of many cool instruments. They are implemented in the package 
 csound-catalog. All packages are compiled with GHC-7.10 So the hackage 
 fails to build them and unfortunately docs a broken too. But you can look 
 at the source code of the module Csound.Patch to now  the names of the 
 instruments. The usage is pretty straightforward. It's described here:
 
 https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression/blob/master/tutorial/chapters/Patches.md
 
 There is an mp3 file to listen to the instruments. 
 http://ge.tt/1jNETqN2/v/0
 
 The 4.8.3 is out! New features:
 
 This is a very important release to me. It tries to solve the problem 
 present in the most open source music-production libraries. It's often the 
 pack of beautiful sounds/timbres is missing. User is presented with many 
 audio primitives but no timbres are present to show the real power of the 
 framework. This release solves this problem. See the friend package 
 csound-catalog on Hackage. It defines 200+ beautiful instruments ready to 
 be used.
 
 The csound-expression defines a new type called Patch for description of 
 an instrument with a chain of effects. It's good place to start the 
 journey to the world of music production.
 
 There are new functions for synchronized reaction on events. The 
 triggering of events can be synchronized with given BPM.
 
 The library is updated for GHC-7.10!
 
 
 
 github repo: https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression
 
 hackage: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/csound-expression
 
 
 
 Cheers!
 
 
 ___
 Haskell-Cafe mailing list
 Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
 http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
> 

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Re: [haskell art] [Haskell-cafe] the library of beautiful instruments implemented in haskell / csound

2015-09-14 Thread Anton Kholomiov
Yes, it can work in real time! There is even an Android app that uses
Csound in real-time. It's called EtherPad. And a couple of iOS  apps:
csGrain and csSpectral

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SZ7Tbc8dIsg
http://www.boulangerlabs.com/

Though some instruments require  lots of CPU.
With Jack I was able to stream the audio to DAW live.

2015-09-14 17:31 GMT+03:00 :

> Oh interesting! I had thought CSound didn't do realtime synthesis.
>
> tom
>
>
> El Sep 14, 2015, a las 6:15, Anton Kholomiov 
> escribió:
>
> It's all was played live with Csound triggered by midi keyboard and
> recorded with Audacity (connected to csound output with Jack)
>
> 2015-09-14 13:11 GMT+03:00 Anton Kholomiov :
>
>> Thanks for feedback. I've used several sources on sound design:
>>
>> Ian McCurdy collection of csound instruments:
>> http://iainmccurdy.org/csound.html
>>
>> Thor demystified series by Gordon Reid:
>> https://www.propellerheads.se/substance/discovering-reason/index.cfm?article=part19=get_article
>>
>> Csound pieces from Csound Catalog: http://www.csounds.com/csound-catalog/
>>
>> Olav Basoski course: https://www.macprovideo.com/tutorial/live8402
>>
>> Sound on sound synth secrets:
>> http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/allsynthsecrets.htm
>>
>> Risset' Amsterdam Collection of Csound Instruments:
>> http://www.codemist.co.uk/AmsterdamCatalog/
>>
>> It's mostly Iain McCurdy instruments, thor demystified series, and
>> instruments from various pieces
>> by Csounders (Csound catalog)
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> 2015-09-14 0:38 GMT+03:00 Tom Murphy :
>>
>>> These sound great, congratulations! "Batteries included" is a great
>>> place to be. Can you point to references you used to create the instrument
>>> definitions?
>>>
>>> Tom
>>>
>>>
>>> On Sun, Sep 13, 2015 at 9:13 AM, Anton Kholomiov <
>>> anton.kholom...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
 Status update for my haskell synth csound-expression. The main point is
 presence of many cool instruments. They are implemented in the package
 csound-catalog. All packages are compiled with GHC-7.10 So the hackage
 fails to build them and unfortunately docs a broken too. But you can look
 at the source code of the module Csound.Patch to now  the names of the
 instruments. The usage is pretty straightforward. It's described here:


 https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression/blob/master/tutorial/chapters/Patches.md

 There is an mp3 file to listen to the instruments.
 http://ge.tt/1jNETqN2/v/0

 *The 4.8.3 is out! New features:*

 This is a very important release to me. It tries to solve the problem
 present in the most open source music-production libraries. It's often the
 pack of beautiful sounds/timbres is missing. User is presented with many
 audio primitives but no timbres are present to show the real power of the
 framework. This release solves this problem. See the friend package
 csound-catalog on Hackage. It defines 200+ beautiful instruments ready to
 be used.

 The csound-expression defines a new type called Patch for description
 of an instrument with a chain of effects. It's good place to start the
 journey to the world of music production.

 There are new functions for synchronized reaction on events. The
 triggering of events can be synchronized with given BPM.

 The library is updated for GHC-7.10!


 github repo: https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression

 hackage: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/csound-expression


 Cheers!

 ___
 Haskell-Cafe mailing list
 Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
 http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe


>>>
>>
>

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Re: [haskell art] [Haskell-cafe] the library of beautiful instruments implemented in haskell / csound

2015-09-14 Thread Anton Kholomiov
Thanks for feedback. I've used several sources on sound design:

Ian McCurdy collection of csound instruments:
http://iainmccurdy.org/csound.html

Thor demystified series by Gordon Reid:
https://www.propellerheads.se/substance/discovering-reason/index.cfm?article=part19=get_article

Csound pieces from Csound Catalog: http://www.csounds.com/csound-catalog/

Olav Basoski course: https://www.macprovideo.com/tutorial/live8402

Sound on sound synth secrets:
http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/allsynthsecrets.htm

Risset' Amsterdam Collection of Csound Instruments:
http://www.codemist.co.uk/AmsterdamCatalog/

It's mostly Iain McCurdy instruments, thor demystified series, and
instruments from various pieces
by Csounders (Csound catalog)




2015-09-14 0:38 GMT+03:00 Tom Murphy :

> These sound great, congratulations! "Batteries included" is a great place
> to be. Can you point to references you used to create the instrument
> definitions?
>
> Tom
>
>
> On Sun, Sep 13, 2015 at 9:13 AM, Anton Kholomiov <
> anton.kholom...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Status update for my haskell synth csound-expression. The main point is
>> presence of many cool instruments. They are implemented in the package
>> csound-catalog. All packages are compiled with GHC-7.10 So the hackage
>> fails to build them and unfortunately docs a broken too. But you can look
>> at the source code of the module Csound.Patch to now  the names of the
>> instruments. The usage is pretty straightforward. It's described here:
>>
>>
>> https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression/blob/master/tutorial/chapters/Patches.md
>>
>> There is an mp3 file to listen to the instruments.
>> http://ge.tt/1jNETqN2/v/0
>>
>> *The 4.8.3 is out! New features:*
>>
>> This is a very important release to me. It tries to solve the problem
>> present in the most open source music-production libraries. It's often the
>> pack of beautiful sounds/timbres is missing. User is presented with many
>> audio primitives but no timbres are present to show the real power of the
>> framework. This release solves this problem. See the friend package
>> csound-catalog on Hackage. It defines 200+ beautiful instruments ready to
>> be used.
>>
>> The csound-expression defines a new type called Patch for description of
>> an instrument with a chain of effects. It's good place to start the journey
>> to the world of music production.
>>
>> There are new functions for synchronized reaction on events. The
>> triggering of events can be synchronized with given BPM.
>>
>> The library is updated for GHC-7.10!
>>
>>
>> github repo: https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression
>>
>> hackage: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/csound-expression
>>
>>
>> Cheers!
>>
>> ___
>> Haskell-Cafe mailing list
>> Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
>> http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
>>
>>
>

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Re: [haskell art] [Haskell-cafe] the library of beautiful instruments implemented in haskell / csound

2015-09-14 Thread Anton Kholomiov
It's all was played live with Csound triggered by midi keyboard and
recorded with Audacity (connected to csound output with Jack)

2015-09-14 13:11 GMT+03:00 Anton Kholomiov :

> Thanks for feedback. I've used several sources on sound design:
>
> Ian McCurdy collection of csound instruments:
> http://iainmccurdy.org/csound.html
>
> Thor demystified series by Gordon Reid:
> https://www.propellerheads.se/substance/discovering-reason/index.cfm?article=part19=get_article
>
> Csound pieces from Csound Catalog: http://www.csounds.com/csound-catalog/
>
> Olav Basoski course: https://www.macprovideo.com/tutorial/live8402
>
> Sound on sound synth secrets:
> http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/allsynthsecrets.htm
>
> Risset' Amsterdam Collection of Csound Instruments:
> http://www.codemist.co.uk/AmsterdamCatalog/
>
> It's mostly Iain McCurdy instruments, thor demystified series, and
> instruments from various pieces
> by Csounders (Csound catalog)
>
>
>
>
> 2015-09-14 0:38 GMT+03:00 Tom Murphy :
>
>> These sound great, congratulations! "Batteries included" is a great place
>> to be. Can you point to references you used to create the instrument
>> definitions?
>>
>> Tom
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Sep 13, 2015 at 9:13 AM, Anton Kholomiov <
>> anton.kholom...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Status update for my haskell synth csound-expression. The main point is
>>> presence of many cool instruments. They are implemented in the package
>>> csound-catalog. All packages are compiled with GHC-7.10 So the hackage
>>> fails to build them and unfortunately docs a broken too. But you can look
>>> at the source code of the module Csound.Patch to now  the names of the
>>> instruments. The usage is pretty straightforward. It's described here:
>>>
>>>
>>> https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression/blob/master/tutorial/chapters/Patches.md
>>>
>>> There is an mp3 file to listen to the instruments.
>>> http://ge.tt/1jNETqN2/v/0
>>>
>>> *The 4.8.3 is out! New features:*
>>>
>>> This is a very important release to me. It tries to solve the problem
>>> present in the most open source music-production libraries. It's often the
>>> pack of beautiful sounds/timbres is missing. User is presented with many
>>> audio primitives but no timbres are present to show the real power of the
>>> framework. This release solves this problem. See the friend package
>>> csound-catalog on Hackage. It defines 200+ beautiful instruments ready to
>>> be used.
>>>
>>> The csound-expression defines a new type called Patch for description
>>> of an instrument with a chain of effects. It's good place to start the
>>> journey to the world of music production.
>>>
>>> There are new functions for synchronized reaction on events. The
>>> triggering of events can be synchronized with given BPM.
>>>
>>> The library is updated for GHC-7.10!
>>>
>>>
>>> github repo: https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression
>>>
>>> hackage: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/csound-expression
>>>
>>>
>>> Cheers!
>>>
>>> ___
>>> Haskell-Cafe mailing list
>>> Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
>>> http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
>>>
>>>
>>
>

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Re: [haskell art] [Haskell-cafe] the library of beautiful instruments implemented in haskell / csound

2015-09-13 Thread Tom Murphy
These sound great, congratulations! "Batteries included" is a great place
to be. Can you point to references you used to create the instrument
definitions?

Tom


On Sun, Sep 13, 2015 at 9:13 AM, Anton Kholomiov 
wrote:

> Status update for my haskell synth csound-expression. The main point is
> presence of many cool instruments. They are implemented in the package
> csound-catalog. All packages are compiled with GHC-7.10 So the hackage
> fails to build them and unfortunately docs a broken too. But you can look
> at the source code of the module Csound.Patch to now  the names of the
> instruments. The usage is pretty straightforward. It's described here:
>
>
> https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression/blob/master/tutorial/chapters/Patches.md
>
> There is an mp3 file to listen to the instruments.
> http://ge.tt/1jNETqN2/v/0
>
> *The 4.8.3 is out! New features:*
>
> This is a very important release to me. It tries to solve the problem
> present in the most open source music-production libraries. It's often the
> pack of beautiful sounds/timbres is missing. User is presented with many
> audio primitives but no timbres are present to show the real power of the
> framework. This release solves this problem. See the friend package
> csound-catalog on Hackage. It defines 200+ beautiful instruments ready to
> be used.
>
> The csound-expression defines a new type called Patch for description of
> an instrument with a chain of effects. It's good place to start the journey
> to the world of music production.
>
> There are new functions for synchronized reaction on events. The
> triggering of events can be synchronized with given BPM.
>
> The library is updated for GHC-7.10!
>
>
> github repo: https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression
>
> hackage: http://hackage.haskell.org/package/csound-expression
>
>
> Cheers!
>
> ___
> Haskell-Cafe mailing list
> Haskell-Cafe@haskell.org
> http://mail.haskell.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haskell-cafe
>
>

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