Re: [linux-audio-user] Hardware samplers

From: Cesare Marilungo <cesare@email-addr-hidden>
Date: Fri Mar 10 2006 - 20:53:29 EET

Cesare Marilungo wrote:

> Carotinho wrote:
>
>> Hi!
>>
>> Alle 11:01, venerd́ 10 marzo 2006, Cesare Marilungo ha scritto:
>>
>>
>>> My suggestion is to save your money and give linuxsampler a try.
>>>
>>
>>
>> But, how can I create my own Gigasamples, or what else are they
>> called? Is there only Windows software?
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> Carotinho
>>
>>
>>
> The developement version of swami (http://swami.sourceforge.net/) has
> introduced sume basic support for the gigasample format. I've never
> used it for this, but I've succesfully produced some custom sf2
> samplebanks with it and used them with fluidsynth (via qsynth,
> http://qsynth.sourceforge.net).
>
> If you couple one of the tools above with Pure Data, you can reach an
> umbelieveble level of flexibility.
>
> For instance, I'm making a pd patch that is basically a virtual
> drummer, with different ranges of random variation, both for timing
> and for velocity, routed to linuxsampler with a very good quality drum
> bank I've found at
> http://www.naturalstudio.co.uk/ns_kit7freedownload.html
>
> Another patch I'm working on can make a good piano soundbank sound
> even more realistic, implementing some of the intrinsicnesses of a
> real piano, like the sympathetic vibration of a string when the key is
> pressed and I play the same key at an octave above, or the fact that
> if I've just hit a key and I hit it again when the hammer hasn't had
> the time to go back in the rest position, and

...the key should play at a lower velocity. :-P

> so on.
>
> In bocca al lupo.
>
> c.

c.

-- 
www.cesaremarilungo.com
Received on Sat Mar 11 00:15:06 2006

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Sat Mar 11 2006 - 00:15:06 EET