chords2midi
supercollider
chords2midi | supercollider | |
---|---|---|
7 | 64 | |
341 | 5,206 | |
- | 0.9% | |
1.8 | 8.4 | |
over 2 years ago | 3 days ago | |
Python | C++ | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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chords2midi
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chords2midi VS midica - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 12 Aug 2023
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I made a completely free music theory website for writing chord progressions where you can export the midi to your DAW
I made a CLI version of this before, you might want to check out the algorithm to see how I did voice leading: https://github.com/Miserlou/chords2midi
- Chords2midi: Create MIDI files from numerical chord progressions
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Coltrane: A music theory library with a command-line interface
Looks awesome, love the tab view.
If there other hackers who make music here, I wrote this:
https://github.com/Miserlou/chords2midi
for writing chord progressions on the command line. I use it for building progressions which I drag into my DAW. It has voice leading, which required me translating an algorithm from 18th century German musical textbook into Python. I don't speak German and there were no unit tests in the 1700s so I'm only fairly certain that it works properly.
I will make a plugin version once ableton supports CLAP.
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Alda – Text-Based Programming Language for Music Composition
I ended up creating a lighter version of this for one my projects, https://github.com/Miserlou/chords2midi
I think that something that Alda looks like it lacks right now is doing things around intervals rather than notes, as transpositions and key changes will be very tedious without embedded knowledge of intervals.
The whole thing is based around a Python library called Mingus, which I think gives you most of what you'd ever need to build a music programming project.
https://bspaans.github.io/python-mingus/
- Anyone has this Nikos beatmaker midi pack?
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Ask HN: Do you create music? let's hear it
This is cool, I made a similar command line tool for generating the same sort of thing: https://github.com/Miserlou/chords2midi
supercollider
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Recreating the THX Deep Note (2009)
Link to the audio programming language / server they're using in the article: https://github.com/supercollider/supercollider
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supercollider VS midica - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 12 Aug 2023
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MuseScore 4.1 is now available
For the intrepid, especially those annoyed with the purported input-sluggishness of musescore et al, an interesting text-based alternative is LilyPond https://lilypond.org/
My dad wrote an opera using LilyPond in vim, though I believe these days he's actually doing more with supercollider, which skips sheetmusic and goes right to sounds: https://supercollider.github.io/
- Has anyone tried automated mastering?
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Why'd you choose programming?
Weirdly enough,I got into programming through music. I got into making experimental electronic music and ended up learning SuperCollider. Figured I’d have to get a real job at some point and I liked learning Supercollider enough that I figured I should try to go back to school and learn some more useful programming languages
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13 Years of History Teaching - Now Thrown Into CS.
So you’re wondering what would making music with code look like? The tools I’m familiar with are TidalCycles, Sonic Pi, and SuperCollider. I’m having a hard time describing what it’s like to make music with tools like these so here’s a video of a performance. One person is live coding the music and the other is live coding the visuals. I think it’s super cool how the music is improvised and built over time by layering commands. Some keywords you could search to see more examples would be Algorave and Livecoding.
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Has anyone else noticed a weird noise coming from their Starlite?
So far mostly Vim (not for coding, just writing so far), NetHack, Firefox, and mpd and ncmpcpp. Also mpv occasionally. I'm planning on installing SuperCollider at some point too and getting back into that, but that shouldn't be too heavy either.
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Clicks & Cuts Minimal Sounds & One Shots
I would say no there aren't any sample packs for this kind of stuff because this entire scene developed around using a samplers and sampling as well as some computer tools like Max/Msp, SuperCollider, Recycle, Cool Edit Pro and some other stuff I am quite likely forgetting at the moment. Also you might look at some of the IRCAM stuff too.
- Ask HN: What audio/sound-related OSS projects can I contribute to?
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Is there any alternative to sonic pi?
Sonic pi is basically a wrapper for the amazing language Supercollider (https://supercollider.github.io/). I highly recommend watching Eli Fieldsteel's excellent tutorials on it (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRzsOOiJ_p4&list=PLPYzvS8A_rTaNDweXe6PX4CXSGq4iEWYC) to see some of what its capable of (I think he is almost a finished a new book on it as well).
What are some alternatives?
mmlgui - GUI for ctrmml
Sonic Pi - Code. Music. Live.
free-midi-chords - A collection of free MIDI chords and progressions ready to be used in your DAW, Akai MPC, or Roland MC-707/101
faust - Functional programming language for signal processing and sound synthesis
alda - A music programming language for musicians. :notes:
Viper4Android-presets - This repository finds a collection of preset for viper4android 2.7+
textbeat - 🎹 plaintext music sequencer and midi shell, with vim playback and the powers of music theory 🥁
csound - Main repository for Csound
avio - Audio Visual IO tools for Isomer
pure-data - Pure Data - a free real-time computer music system
melrose - interactive programming of melodies, producing MIDI
glicol - Graph-oriented live coding language and music/audio DSP library written in Rust