>
> Hi:
>
> What do you plan to do with your audio workstation? As you can
> imagine, editing one file with Audacity is very different from running
> a SuperCollider server for many users while simultaneously recording
> its output with Ardour *and* broadcasting it on the Internet.
>
A very good point indeed.
I would like to be able to record stuff from guitar, midi-keyboard,
microphone, DJ setup (via line input I suppose), and then edit the
results with the appropriate applications. Not all at once, but maybe
1-3 inputs at a time. The ability to play in real-time through the
computer's output would be very important I think as I reckon it's much
harder to work any other way.
That's all I can think of right now. I currently have an SB Live with
the LiveDrive thing, which has all the inputs I need, but I am thinking
in terms of general system horsepower (RAM/CPU/disk etc). Finding a
supported sound card it's really a problem, I'll just go with M-Audio
for that. But I would like to know if I need to get one to do what I want.
K.
--
Kev Green, aka Kyrian. E: kyrian@ore.org WWW: http://kyrian.ore.org/
Linux/Security Contractor/LAMP Coder/ISP, via http://www.orenet.co.uk/
DJ via http://www.hellnoise.co.uk/
Human Rights left unattended may be Removed, or Destroyed, or Damaged
by the Security Services.
updates(a)fedoraproject.org wrote:
> The update for rakarrack-0.2.0-5.fc8 has been in 'testing' status for over 2 weeks.
..
> ================================================================================
> rakarrack-0.2.0-5.fc8
> ================================================================================
> Update ID: FEDORA-2008-9033
> Release: Fedora 8
> Status: testing
> Type: newpackage
> Karma: 0
> Bugs: 455953 - Review Request: rakarrack - Audio effects processing rack
> : for guitar
> Notes: Initial build of rakarrack for fedora
> Submitter: dtimms
> Submitted: 2008-10-20 21:46:29
> Comments: dtimms - 2008-10-20 21:46:32 (karma 0)
> This update has been submitted for testing
> bodhi - 2008-10-23 16:35:19 (karma 0)
> This update has been pushed to testing
>
> http://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/F8/FEDORA-2008-9033
Hi fedora-music lovers,
I would be keen for some feedback on whether rakarrack that is now in
fedora testing works for you ?
To fully test you'll need a guitar and pickup plugged into your
soundcard, but even a go/nogo on whether it starts would be helpful.
Where I developed the package, it works OK, but another older AMD
machine, it fails during startup. This will help me to decide whether to
push it to the F8,F9 updates repos.
DaveT.
I got whysynth-dssi-20060122-7.src.rpm from here:
http://people.redhat.com/green/FE/devel/
I rebuilt it on FC6 without problems. The thing is, the GUI doesn't show
up. The program appears to be working, I see the outputs being
automatically routed in qjackctl, but there's no GUI anywhere!
###############################################
$ jack-dssi-host whysynth.so
jack-dssi-host: Warning: DSSI path not set
jack-dssi-host: Defaulting to
"/usr/local/lib/dssi:/usr/lib/dssi:/home/florin/.dssi"
jack-dssi-host: OSC URL is:
osc.udp://rivendell.home.local:15040/dssi/whysynth/WhySynth/chan00
host: Ready
WhySynth_gtk starting (pid 4305)...
###############################################
--
Florin Andrei
http://florin.myip.org/
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [Guest Colloquium] Juan Pampin and Ake Parmerud - Ambisonics,
3D Audio
Date: Tue, 19 May 2015 08:12:07 -0700
From: Madeline Huberth <mhuberth(a)ccrma.Stanford.EDU>
To: local-users(a)ccrma.Stanford.EDU <local-users(a)ccrma.Stanford.EDU>
Hello everyone,
Please join us Wednesday, May 20th from 5:15pm-6:30pm for a pre-concert
talk/guest colloquium by Juan Pampin and Ake Parmerud, whose works will
also be presented in the Bing Studio later that evening.
Event's page:
https://ccrma.stanford.edu/events/guest-colloquium-may-20th-juan-pampin-and…
Artist Bios:
*Juan Pampin* is Associate Professor of Music Composition at University
of Washington, Seattle, and founding faculty member of the Center for
Digital Arts and Experimental Media (DXARTS), for which he currently
serves as Director. He graduated from Conservatoire National Supérieur
de Musique de Lyon, France, where he studied with Philippe Manoury and
Denis Lorrain. He got a DMA from Stanford University where he studied
composition with Jonathan Harvey and computer music at the Center for
Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA).
Juan Pampin’s works explore the territory delineated by the concepts of
site, memory, and materiality through the use of algorithmic strategies
to produce aural phenomena. His music compositions, including pieces for
instrumental, digital, and mixed media, have been performed around the
world by world-class soloists and ensembles such as Susana Kasakoff,
Garth Knox, JACK quartet, Percussions de Strasbourg, Krakow Percussion
Ensemble, to name just a few. His work "On Space" –for percussion sextet
and 3D electronic sounds– has been recently released on CD as part of
Les Percussions de Strasbourg 50th anniversary historical edition box
published by Universal France.
*Åke Parmerud* has successfully pursued a professional career in
contemporary music and multi-media art since the late 70’s. Although he
originally trained as a photographer ( 1972-74 ) he went on to study
music at university and subsequently the Göteborg Conservatory of Music.
In addition to his electro-acoustic and instrumental music, his prolific
list of works includes compositions covering a broad cross-section of
modern experimental music in the fields of dance, film, interactive art,
multi-media, theatre and video.
Åke’s work has been acclaimed since his piece “Proximities” received
first prize at the 1978 Bourges International Electroacoustic Music
Festival in France. Since then he has received 17 international prizes
and 3 major Swedish prizes (see prizes and awards
<http://parmerud.com/MediaArtist/Awards.html>). On two occasions he has
also received the Swedish “grammy” award for Best Classical Album of the
Year and his music has represented Swedish Radio twice at The Prix Italia.
He is regularly commissioned to compose works by important international
institutions and his works have been presented worldwide. In 1997 his
piece “Grains of Voices” was performed at the U.N in New York on United
Nations Day. His music has been released on numerous albums and
compilations, and in 1998 he became a member of The Swedish Royal
Academy of Music.
Åke Parmerud is not just a composer he is also a stage performer,
playing electro-acoustic concerts using many different types of
interactive instruments - often solo. He has toured extensively in
Europe, North and South America. In the late 80’s he teamed-up with
composer Anders Blomqvist, and their live performances - which included
fireworks - were successful all round Europe well into the 90’s.
The last ten years have seen Åke working as an innovative sound and
software designer for interactive audio/visual installations. His own
works “The Fire Inside”, “The Living Room” and “Lost Angel” have been
shown in Berlin, Göteborg, Leon, Mexico City, Paris and Reykavic. He has
also designed concerts and been artistic director for large audio/visual
events both indoors and outdoors.
Åke’s artistic reputation has led to several creative international
collaborations. Between 1999 and 2006 he worked closely with the Danish
“art team” Boxiganga <http://www.boxiganga.dk/>, developing
revolutionary interactive video installations plus exploring telematic
concepts and interactive solutions for live performances. In 2000, 2001
and 2002 he also worked with Canadian choreographer Pierre-Paul Savoi
<http://www.ppsdanse.com/>as composer, sound and software designer.
His most recent stage work “Metamorphos” was developed together with
Canadian dance choreographer Mireille Leblanc
<http://www.mireilleleblanc.com/> who also choreographed the interactive
sound/video-installation “Lost Angel” and the prize winning dance
performance ”The Seventh Sense”.
He recently formed AudioTechture <http://www.audiotechture.se/> with
Olle Niklasson. This is a company specialising in acoustic interior
design for diverse environments from private houses to public spaces.
He is also a member of an international multi-media/multi-disciplinary
arts organisation: Celestial Mekaniks. <http://celestialmekaniks.com/>
Best,
Madeline
[Apologies for cross-postings] [Please distribute]
Conference date: 7th - 10th June 2018
The Linux Audio Conference 2018 will be hosted at c-base, Berlin - in
partnership with the Electronic Music Studio (TU Berlin) and Spektrum.
https://lac.linuxaudio.org/2018
Deadline for all submissions: February 28th, 2018 (23:59 UTC)
- - -
1: Call for Papers / Posters / Workshops
LAC 2018 invites submissions of papers, posters and workshops addressing all
areas of audio processing based on Linux and open source software.
All submissions and presentations are in English. All submissions are peer
reviewed by a committee of experts from different disciplines.
Submissions can focus on technical, artistic or scientific issues and can
target developers or users.
For more details see the website:
https://lac.linuxaudio.org/2018/pages/cfp/
Papers
Papers must be written and presented in English.
The length of papers is 4 to 8 pages, with up to 5 keywords, and an abstract of
up to 200 words.
Posters
The poster presentations are based on paper submissions of 2-4 pages,
with up to 5 keywords and an abstract of up to 150 words.
Workshops
The workshop presentation (max duration of 2h) should be 1-4 pages, with up to
5 keywords, and an abstract of up to 150 words to be published on the
conference website.
Submit a brief description of the workshop including URL (if available).
How to submit?
* Use the OpenConf online submission tool at
https://lac.linuxaudio.org/2018/openconf
* Select the relevant submission type ('_ PAPER _' / '_ POSTER _' / '_ WORKSHOP _')
* The required file format is PDF, formatted for A4 paper. Authors are required
to use the templates for paper formatting available as download on the
conference website.
* Please notify us if you need a special technical setup for your presentation.
- - -
2: Call for Music Performances / Multimedia Installations
LAC 2018 also invites submissions of Electroacoustic Works and Multimedia
Installations.
A jury will select the compositions and installations to be included in the
conference program according to artistic merit and technical feasibility.
Please be prepared to perform your work yourself and make sure that you have
all resources needed to perform your piece at your disposal (e.g. instruments,
other performers, etc.).
Unfortunately, LAC 2018 cannot pay a fee neither for you nor for any additional
performers, and LAC 2018 cannot organize or pay for travel or accommodation
neither for you nor for any additional performers.
All submissions are peer reviewed by a committee of experts in music and arts.
Electroacoustic Works and Multimedia Installation can address all areas of
digital audio and audiovisual art.
Available Technical Setups
For concerts, the LAC will provide the following equipment:
* 8-channel - speaker setup
* Stereo setup + video projection
* Digital mixing desk
Additional requests can not be guaranteed.
How to submit?
* Use the OpenConf online submission tool at
https://lac.linuxaudio.org/2018/openconf
* Select the submission type '_ PERFORMANCE _'
* The required file format is PDF, formatted for A4 paper. It includes:
* Description of the project program notes
* Link to video or audio demonstration of the project
* Technical rider of the work
Important Dates
* Deadline for all submissions: February 28th, 2018 (23:59 UTC)
* Acceptance notification: March 31st, 2018
* Final deadline for 'camera ready' paper: April 15th, 2018
* Author registration deadline: April 15th, 2018
* Final program: May 1st, 2018
Up-to-date information regarding the conference can be found on its website:
https://lac.linuxaudio.org/2018
Looking forward to seeing you in Berlin!
The Linux Audio Conference 2018 team