Le Thu, 11 Nov 2010 16:43:41 -0300,
Camilo Polymeris <cpolymeris@gmail.com> a écrit :
> >> For me, a stand alone pitch detection application would be better :
> >>
> >> audio in -> pitch detect -> midi out
> >>
> >> You plug the instrument into the audio in, connect the midi out to
> >> any midi in in qjackctl, and it is just to play some melody.
> >>
> >> Ciao,
> >> Dominique
> >>
> >
> > There is aubionotes (http://aubio.org/aubionotes.html), which claims
> > to do exactly what you want. Don't know how well, though. I am
> > trying to connect it to PianoBooster, to see if that could be a
> > solution. WaoN could also be an option, I'll try that next.
> > Eventually, I'd like an integrated app.
> >
> > Greetings,
> > Camilo
> >
Thanks for the tip !
>
> Ok. If someone is interested: I can report that aubionotes works quite
> well for the samples I tried (brass mostly, all monophonic). WaoN is
> similar, maybe even better, but doesn't work realtime, it handles
> pre-recorded samples, only.
Same thing here. I think that it must use some kind of fft. The problem
with fft and realtime is not the processing power but the time it take
before you get a sufficient amount of samples in order to be able to run
the fft.
Ciao,
Dominique
-- "We have the heroes we deserve." _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list Linux-audio-dev@lists.linuxaudio.org http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-devReceived on Fri Nov 12 08:15:01 2010
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Fri Nov 12 2010 - 08:15:01 EET