| John,
Start with some of the easier examples and experiment and explore.
Check out the Canonical manual--- its opcodes, and examples of how
they're implemented and used.
Like the old saying goes, "the proof of the pudding is in the
tasting". It's all in the doing.
Watch and read the emails, ask questions, pick-up what you can and
what you can use. I drop 1/3 of the emails outright, because Windows
and Linux aren't pertenant to my Op System, or the front end application
isn't pertenant to my other applications. But, the universal stuff
like opcodes is always useful.
This is what the community is here for. You are not alone. Novice
and expert alike, we're all here.
Enjoy exploring.
Cheers,
-Partev
=================================================================
--- alpha.omega23@ymail.com wrote:
From: John Colgrove
To: "csound@lists.bath.ac.uk"
Subject: [Csnd] fundamentals?
Date: Mon, 25 Apr 2011 09:41:56 -0700 (PDT)
I feel like this is the wrong place for this so forgive me if it is.
Are there any books (or articles) out there to help me learn the
basics of synthesis? I don't want to go in a classroom I just want to
teach myself. I already have the csound book but unfortunately not
enough time to look through it all the way.
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