Hi Cesare, The Vercoe and Dodge pieces were the first I listened to on that site. =P Thanks for pointing out the Solaris entry! steven On Nov 15, 2007 2:44 AM, Cesare Marilungo wrote: > > Steven Yi wrote: > > Hi All, > > > > I came across this today: > > > > http://www.moogarchives.com/moogdemo.htm > > > > on this blog: > > > > http://orpheusrecords.blogspot.com/ > > > > (which by the way has some very neat things there...) > > > > Thought others here who may be synthesizer enthusiasts might enjoy the > > audio demo. > > > > Thanks! > > steven > > > > > > Send bugs reports to this list. > > To unsubscribe, send email sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk with body "unsubscribe csound" > > > > > > > http://orpheusrecords.blogspot.com/search/label/Barry%20Vercoe > > Mmh... Barry Vercoe. Where have I heard this name before? :-) > > http://orpheusrecords.blogspot.com/2007/05/orpheus-record-02-edward-artemiev.html > > I love Tarkovsky's Solaris (and the novel btw) and its soundtrack. When > I saw the movie for the first time I though: "ok, the main theme is > Bach, but who is the author of the rest of the soundtrack? It's amazing". > > Then I found the dvd, and knew it was by Edward Artemiev. > > But I didn't know anything at all about the ANS Synthesizer: > > http://www.theremin.ru/archive/ans.htm > > This is mind blowing. =-O > > I mean it's the most intuitive and direct way of composing with pure > sine tones one could think of. And what about 720 microtones that can be > reproduced at the same time? > > Wow! > > -c. > > -- > www.cesaremarilungo.com > > > > Send bugs reports to this list. > To unsubscribe, send email sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk with body "unsubscribe csound" >