I've been listening to these at work lately. Quite nice. I assume the keyboard sounding synthesizer is also realtime csound? Using sounds from the "standard patch library" you included?
Clearly it's not trying to be traditional music, but no gamakam for the bansuri? I'm not familiar with Hindustani ragas but I would think you couldn't play one or even recognize it without gamakam. I've been working on a notation for gamakam (in haskell, sort of) lately so such things are on my mind. On Fri, Mar 4, 2016 at 1:19 PM, Anton Kholomiov <anton.kholom...@gmail.com> wrote: > I've posted some tracks that I've made with Haskell. > Here is some another sort of musical activity that I'd like to share with > you. > > I've made a little software in haskell to play pads/drones and beats. > You may listen to the music on soundcloud: > > https://soundcloud.com/kailash-project > > We play bansuri, guitar and metallophone everything else is made with > haskell (pads, beats, voices and synths). And it's played in real time. > The audio quality is not so good. It was recorded with single microphone. > > I can trigger and stop loops with keyboard. The loops can be synchronized > by bpm > or they can be free of tempo (it can be usefull for pads). Also I use > synthesizers > that I've encoded in haskell. I've posted the link to the synth some time > ago.. > It's made with my lib csound-expression: > > https://github.com/spell-music/csound-expression/blob/master/tutorial/Index.md > > Thanks for listening! > Anton > > -- > > Read the whole topic here: Haskell Art: > http://lurk.org/r/topic/6DxOiLIdokJm5Etx6U80Nt > > To leave Haskell Art, email haskell-...@group.lurk.org with the following > email subject: unsubscribe -- Read the whole topic here: Haskell Art: http://lurk.org/r/topic/6kRF2BtJsyUQeHC7tcGwoC To leave Haskell Art, email haskell-...@group.lurk.org with the following email subject: unsubscribe