Vincent Touquet wrote:
On Thu, Sep 05, 2002 at 10:15:57AM -0700, Brian Redfern wrote:
IIwusynth is really nice and performs well, its a soundfont software
sampler, and swamii is a soundfont editor that uses it for its engine. I
get good realtime playback on my laptop and have access to tons of
On Sat, Sep 07, 2002 at 02:01:24PM +0200, Peter Hanappe wrote:
We're thinking of adding a .wav loader to iiwusynth. In that
case you won't need to convert it to a soundfont before hand.
I can't give you a date when this feature will be available,
though.
Nice :)
I'll be looking forward to it.
On Thu, Sep 05, 2002 at 11:00:58 +0200, Miha Tom¹iè wrote:
This is what LAD HP has to say on the topic:
After a long thread on LAD about the need of a disk-based real-time
sampler, Benno has hacked up a very alpha implementation of a Then
Unnamed Sampler to summarize the state of discussion.
IIwusynth is really nice and performs well, its a soundfont software
sampler, and swamii is a soundfont editor that uses it for its engine. I
get good realtime playback on my laptop and have access to tons of
soundfonts on cdrom.
On Thu, 5 Sep 2002, Steve Harris wrote:
On Thu, Sep 05, 2002 at
On Thu, Sep 05, 2002 at 10:15:57AM -0700, Brian Redfern wrote:
IIwusynth is really nice and performs well, its a soundfont software
sampler, and swamii is a soundfont editor that uses it for its engine. I
get good realtime playback on my laptop and have access to tons of
soundfonts on cdrom.
Is
Soundfonts are based on normal samples, they just give you control over
envelope paramters so you can use midi to control extra parameters, like
use velocity to alter cut off. I'm working on my own personal library
right now with various drum machnines and acousti instrument samples.
On Thu, 5
On Thu, Sep 05, 2002 at 10:39:07AM -0700, Brian Redfern wrote:
Soundfonts are based on normal samples, they just give you control over
envelope paramters so you can use midi to control extra parameters, like
use velocity to alter cut off. I'm working on my own personal library
right now with
You can use the info in the softsynth tutorial on Patrick Shirey's
quicktoots site, what you want to do is connect the vmidi driver to
iiwusynth and then use your preffered sequencer to sequence the
soundfonts.
On Thu, 5 Sep 2002, Vincent Touquet wrote:
On Thu, Sep 05, 2002 at 10:39:07AM
On Thu, 5 Sep 2002, Vincent Touquet wrote:
On Thu, Sep 05, 2002 at 10:39:07AM -0700, Brian Redfern wrote:
Soundfonts are based on normal samples, they just give you control over
envelope paramters so you can use midi to control extra parameters, like
use velocity to alter cut off. I'm
On Thu, 5 Sep 2002, Brian Redfern wrote:
You can use the info in the softsynth tutorial on Patrick Shirey's
quicktoots site, what you want to do is connect the vmidi driver to
iiwusynth and then use your preffered sequencer to sequence the
soundfonts.
Or just use the native ALSA sequencer
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