On 2/15/20 11:43 AM, David McKevy wrote:
Yes for azimuth planner!
Then again, did Varese use a panner for Corbusier Phillip's Pavillion?
If you have access, there are details here:
https://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/comj.2009.33.2.24
Or:
http://www.cirma.unito.it/vep/reconstruction.html
http://www.music.mcgill.ca/~ich/research/misc/papers/cr1251.pdf
(apparently paper tapes - 4 channels? - were routing audio to clusters
or individual speakers, as a many as 350 speakers were affixed to the
walls, amazing...)
-- Fernando
On Sat, Feb 15, 2020, 1:04 PM Fernando Lopez-Lezcano <
na...@ccrma.stanford.edu> wrote:
On 2/15/20 5:15 AM, Augustine Leudar wrote:
Hi Marc
I mean completely analogue. I use things like the leap or wii for
digital.
I mean if you didn't want to use any software at all.
You need to get one of these:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azimuth_Co-ordinator
:-)
-- Fernando
https://www.neptunepinkfloyd.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24035
On Saturday, 15 February 2020, Marc Lavallée <m...@hacklava.net> wrote:
Le 20-02-15 à 07 h 36, Augustine Leudar a écrit :
What was/is around in terms of analogue physical 3D or horizontal only
panners? I've seen the little joystick things on desks. Was wondering
what
else?
Do you mean panners using analog electronics and physical controls to
pan the sound through analog only electronics (without any computing
involved),
or physical controllers as input devices for digital sound panners? For
interactive installations, I built/used/seen:
- big trackballs (like those in vintage video games)
- long levers (like giant joysticks)
- cameras, presence detectors, touch screens...
Basically, any controller can be used.
Marc
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