Hi Atte, I've used Csound alot in the past too. Mostly command line from Common Music which I like alot. I'm trying to go more real-time though now. I just decided I would try and get into PD! How is your orchestra set-up. Do you have 1 synth per instrument per channel? I always had a hard time in Csound as I wanted to have 1 synth per 16 channels and have them all have their own set of presets. PD supports multiple midi ports so I thought that would probably work, though learning another language will be tough as I know Csound well. I also want the graphic routines, and as you know Csound dosen't have the Opengl stuff in Linux, (yet). I also don't understand the status of Csound right now. Is anyone actually working on coding Csound5? I'm on the lists but can't tell. Thanks, Ken -----Original Message----- From: Atte Andr? Jensen <atte@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Sep 15, 2003 8:47 AM To: linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] Linux synths On Mon, 15 Sep 2003 07:44:23 -0700 (GMT-07:00) Ken Locarnini <renueden@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I'm happy to be back after about 2 years away from Linux. The > audio/music world seems to be taking off and thats great. Indeed! > I'd like some general comments on what would be peoples favorite > reactor type synth in Linux as of now. I'm primarily interested in > realtime, multi timbral midi controlled synths. I simply love csound. It's flexible, powerful, stable and well documented. I know that some (most?) people find the fact that it's text based a minus, but I don't agree. After working with pd intensely for a couple of weeks I realized that I work much faster in csound. I'm running csound under debian/unstable on kernel 2.6.0-test5 with a csound buffersize of 128 on a PIV 2400 laptop, using Evolution USB keyboards as controllers. I have more polyphony in real time than I can use with two hands for "normal" (subtractive, fm, sample playback, soundfont playback, additive) patches. This is even with a few global FX units (chorus, delay and rotary speaker) running all the time. The only not-so-nice thing about csound is that I didn't manage (or try that hard, actually) to make it run alongside other sound-producing applications, including jack, pd or fluidsynth. Could be a problem if you want to use LADSPA plugins or do hd-recording... > How about sequencers? I didn't work much with sequencers under linux, but FWIW I've settled on Muse. Needless to say it's quite simple to route midi events from Muse to csound. -- peace, love & harmony Atte