| I neglected to point out that these arrangements tax realtime capability to
the maximum. 33 instruments must sustain simultaneously; each is composed of
7 poscils or oscilis, for a total of 231 oscillators. All through a global
reverbsc in stereo.
A recent laptop of mine handles the poscils at 48000Hz, a fairly current
desktop can do only 44100Hz with oscilis (which are less taxing than
poscils) - whereas an older PentiumII can't even pump it out at 11025Hz.
Dave Seidel's system handled oscilis at 32000Hz, as I recall.
Instructions accommodate and test different levels of computing power. The
goal is: how high a quality is possible without stutter/breakup?
Art Hunkins
----- Original Message -----
From: "Art Hunkins"
To:
Sent: Friday, March 10, 2006 2:40 PM
Subject: New Live Csound5 Arrangement: Sublimation (Realtime Version)
> Announcing my latest project, live performance versions of Dave Seidel's
> Sublimation for Csound5.
>
> Called Sublimation (Realtime Version), the arrangements (2 of them)
require
> Csound5, as they make use of the new opcode reverbsc. (Yes, this was what
my
> recent reverb questions were all about.)
>
> A complete .zip file and separate .txt Instructions file are downloadable
at
> www.arthunkins.com. (Top of compositions list.) And in case the .zip file
> can't be downloaded on platforms other than Windows (please advise), I've
> attached all three files here (one .txt instructions + the two .csd's).
>
> I've tested the arrangements on Windows XP and ME. What I'd really
> appreciate is for some of you to try the two versions (SublimationRT.csd
and
> the alternate SublimationRTAlt.csd) on Linux and Mac. As we all know
> (hope?), they *should* work. Are any different or instructions
> required for the various platforms.
>
> FLTK is not used (that should simplify things); the performance vehicle is
a
> MIDI device comprising a bank of 6-8 controllers - either sliders or
rotary
> pots. Performance is *very* simple.
>
> I'll much appreciate the feedback.
>
> Art Hunkins
>
> |