Audio
M8Docs
Audio | M8Docs | |
---|---|---|
39 | 16 | |
1,037 | 177 | |
- | 0.6% | |
3.3 | 1.6 | |
5 days ago | 10 months ago | |
C++ | ||
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Audio
- Where is a good place to get started with DSP coding?
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DIY pedal using Arduino and breadboard?
Teensy which gives you a lot of options with its audio library and GUI tool.
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DIY MIDI Sequencer
Teensy is more powerful than Arduino, 4.X boards are in stock, 8 sets of serial ports, and has a supported audio library
- A Low Latency Guitar Effects Processor Suitable for Running on a Raspberry Pi
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teensy, daisy, axoloti, bela, owl? which DIY platform... is good for what?
Just in case you don't want to go from low level code and up this is the library development version (there is a release version that you install into the Arduino environment as well) and this is the GUI that makes it simpler to do the layout work for the modules of your device to make it more straight forward to do the build of the design work. You drag the modules from the left into the work area and then connect them up. Once you have the layout you want you then export the code for it into the Arduino IDE. In the right hand panel is the description of each module and what commands are used for it in the IDE.
- Teensy 4.1 AUDIO_INPUT_LINEIN
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Mathematical function based synthesizer
If you are targetting microprocessors, you are probably best coding it from scratch so you can optimise. Teensy 4 seems to be the platform of choice for a lot of synth projects. The Teensy Audio Library might give you a bit of a head start. Dexed-micro touch is a great open project that can give you an idea of what is possible on Teensy and the dev is quite approachable.
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Show HN: A saxophone with keyboard keys, in Rust
You can overcome the RPi scarcity by migrating the code to the Teensy platform, which aside being cheaper and less power hungry than the 2,3,4 RPi, is a lot cheaper and more easily available. Not an easy task since there's no Linux under the hood, but there are some excellent audio/midi libraries to help. They already built commercial-level synthesizers with it. By combining the breath sensor data with other pressure sensors you could end up with a very expressive instrument.
https://www.pjrc.com/teensy/index.html
https://www.pjrc.com/teensy/td_libs_Audio.html
https://www.pjrc.com/teensy/td_libs_MIDI.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2674LdYW5I
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Wiring up to Elwire and a battery pack?
Personally, if I need to make custom software modules and design my own PCBs, I'm almost certainly not going to use something like LightShowPi as my starting code. I'd probably use a Teensy + Audio Shield + EL Sequencer and have the Teensy Audio Library do all the FFT/beat detection. It'd be much more power efficient, easier (IMHO) to build and maintain, and it still allows for expansion options for future add-ons. Funny thing is, I actually own an El Escudo Dos, but I have found it to be a giant PITA compared to simple edge-lit "Neon" LED strips or even the newer "nOOds" from Adafruit.
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NeuralPi: Raspberry Pi guitar pedal using neural networks
> Silly question but why is the Pi necessary?
Not sure about this project, but generally it is not. All it needs is a small board capable of running Linux and the necessary drivers for external ADCs/DACs where necessary, plus the digital fx software. As an example, Guitarix runs also on ARM and can work on cheaper boards such as the Orange PI, Nano PI and many others cheaper and more obtanium than the Raspberry PI. https://guitarix.org/
In some cases you don't even need to run Linux. There are many effects projects using a cheap Teensy board plus its piggybacked audio card; it features a really powerful audio library and is compatible with the Arduino IDE.
https://www.pjrc.com/teensy/
https://www.pjrc.com/teensy/td_libs_Audio.html
The Teensy is truly amazing, to the point one can build synthesizers that just a few years ago would cost hundreds of bucks. Take a look for example at the TSynth, 100% Open Hardware & Open Source, also available in kit.
https://electrotechnique.cc/
Demo here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uCA2L7CeWSE
M8Docs
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Deluge Tracker
M8 headlless
- How would I recreate something like the pad in this video?
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hacking the polyend to for m8 headless
I've never tried the Polyend, but that's a bummer it didn't work out for you. I still highly recommend the Headless M8 if you're of the hacking / modding persuasion... And even if you're not, it's SUPER easy and affordable for a noob to set up. From my experience, the only significant difference was that I couldn't figure out a MIDI out solution for the Headless...
- I'm seeing people use the M8 Tracker software on their pcs and other handhelds. Where can I find the software? Wasn't able to pick a M8 tracker up before they sold out.
- another weekly tune
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The M8 is easily the most versatile piece of music equipment I’ve ever used.
they have a headless version of the M8 that costs around $30. https://github.com/DirtyWave/M8Docs/blob/main/docs/M8HeadlessSetup.md
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My computer won’t recognize Teensy 4.1?
I have it installed, but not running. I’m trying to install firmware for a synthesizer on the Teensy using a program called TyTools. The instructions say it should pop up once plugged in. https://github.com/DirtyWave/M8Docs/blob/main/docs/M8HeadlessSetup.md
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Some gothic Castlevania style Chiptune I made on Dirtywave M8 Tracker. Enjoy 👍
It is not a cheap device at all, but it also an incredibly capable device. If you want to give it a shot and like the LSDJ style workflow you can look into putting together a Headless Setup for relatively cheap https://github.com/DirtyWave/M8Docs/blob/main/docs/M8HeadlessSetup.md
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Dirtywave m8 headless with an arduino ?
This is the GitHub link
- Tracker software for keyboard-only workflow?
What are some alternatives?
ESP8266Audio - Arduino library to play MOD, WAV, FLAC, MIDI, RTTTL, MP3, and AAC files on I2S DACs or with a software emulated delta-sigma DAC on the ESP8266 and ESP32
M8HeadlessFirmware - M8 Headless Precompiled Firmware
zynthian-sys - System configuration scripts & files for Zynthian.
ft2-clone - Fasttracker 2 clone for Windows/macOS/Linux
logue-sdk - This repository contains all the files and tools needed to build custom oscillators and effects for the prologue synthesizer.
nts-1-customizations - Official repository for hardware customizations of the Nu:Tekt NTS-1 digital kit
Mozzi - sound synthesis library for Arduino
haxo-hw - Haxophone, an electronic musical instrument that resembles a saxophone
neural-amp-modeler - Neural network emulator for guitar amplifiers.
DaisySP - A Powerful DSP Library in C++
arduino_midi_library - MIDI for Arduino
arduino-audio-tools - Arduino Audio Tools (a powerful Audio library not only for Arduino)