lispbuilder
overtone
lispbuilder | overtone | |
---|---|---|
2 | 28 | |
186 | 5,817 | |
0.0% | 0.5% | |
10.0 | 8.5 | |
almost 3 years ago | 1 day ago | |
Common Lisp | Clojure | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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lispbuilder
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Gamedev in Lisp. Part 1: ECS and Metalinguistic Abstraction
Likely it will still mostly work today as Common Lisp is quite resilient to bit rot https://github.com/lispbuilder/lispbuilder
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Lisp for audio programming
I did some audio programming with lisp about 10 years ago. I used SDL and lispbuilder which was a project I was involved with at the time. At this level of programming you are dealing with channels of audio, you can prepare a buffer to play and you modify the outgoing audio in realtime with a callback. I assume this is the level you are interested in? The next level down would be talking directly to the audio drivers or OS level interface to them. Anyway here’s the api code https://github.com/lispbuilder/lispbuilder/blob/master/lispbuilder-sdl/sdl/audio.lisp
overtone
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Synth wars: The story of MIDI (2023)
> Midi being an “artist” tool places it more as a medium like paint.
I’ve used MIDI “as paint”.
Written music using code to MIDI(1), and wrote “cross instrument” music, ie using my keyboard as drum machine.
But these days MIDI is chiefly an archival method for me.
Every time I touch my keyboard is recorded, is much smaller than a comparable audio recording, by design “forced fidelity” in the recording, and I am able to pipe the MIDI format through transcription software (which would be near impossible from an audio recording today).
(1) http://overtone.github.io/
- My Sixth Year as a Bootstrapped Founder
- Linux Audio Primer (for Overtone users)
- Overtone – programmable, live music in Clojure
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Lisp for audio programming
I've never actually used it myself. I've preferred systems that talk to SuperCollider, like overtone, because it's already rock solid and has lots of good DSP built in.
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Clojure Turns 15 panel discussion video
Thanks. I don't know to what extend its "better-because-of-clojure" but I also found overtone https://github.com/overtone/overtone which should be good fun (though the underlying synthesizer is supercollider/C++).
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Music Programming for Java and JVM Languages
You might want to look at Overtone, which is a clojure environment built on top of overtone, and which integrates with processing and a few other similar things.
https://overtone.github.io/
- Overtone: Collaborative Programmable Music
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Sonic Pi – The Live Coding Music Synth for Everyone
> I'm fluent in Python but find the use of colons is the real sticking point.
The you'd probably have hated its predecessor which was all about the parentheses: https://overtone.github.io/
It's too bad that superficial stuff like which characters you need to type is holding you back. Getting used to Ruby when you're familiar with Python is no big deal. I would just stick with it
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Can I create an application to help me work out my drums rudiments in emacs
There's a project you may find interesting: https://overtone.github.io/. Besides sound/synthesis stuff, it has https://github.com/overtone/midi-clj library, which allows you to write MIDI as lisp (Clojure, to be precise) code. Emacs has great support for Clojure programming (via Cider), and REPL-based development is perfect for writing music.
What are some alternatives?
cl-collider - A SuperCollider client for CommonLisp
Sonic Pi - Code. Music. Live.
Tidal - Pattern language
MuseScore - MuseScore is an open source and free music notation software. For support, contribution, bug reports, visit MuseScore.org. Fork and make pull requests!
pipewire - Mirror of the PipeWire repository (see https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/)
awesome-livecoding - All things livecoding
scheme-for-max - Max/MSP external for scripting and live coding Max with s7 Scheme Lisp
VeeSeeVSTRack - Open-source virtual modular synthesizer
elk-pi - Elk Audio OS binary images for Raspberry Pi
JUCE - JUCE is an open-source cross-platform C++ application framework for desktop and mobile applications, including VST, VST3, AU, AUv3, LV2 and AAX audio plug-ins.
glicol - Graph-oriented live coding language and music/audio DSP library written in Rust
ThinkDSP - Think DSP: Digital Signal Processing in Python, by Allen B. Downey.