Am 08.09.19 um 17:14 schrieb S.: > So it looks like applying a > lower velocity "curve" to a key could be as simple as applying a value <1.0 > ? And to actually make it "curvy" instead of a straight line? Here's the doc of the Velocity event modifier unit: http://dsacre.github.io/mididings/doc/units.html#mididings.Velocity Remember, you can restrict the effect of units to certain notes by putting a KeyFilter unit in front of it: http://dsacre.github.io/mididings/doc/units.html#mididings.KeyFilter > The problem with midifilter.lv2 and mididings is that they're not packaged > for hardly any distros. midifilter.lv2 has very few dependencies. Installing it should be a matter of downloading the release archive (https://github.com/x42/midifilter.lv2/releases/tag/v0.6.0), making sure you've got the "build-essential" package group (assuming a debian-like distro) and the lv2 header package installed and then just running "make" followed by "sudo make PREFIX=/usr install". mididings is a bit more complicated, since it doesn't work well with Python 3 and Python 2 is being phased out across distros. But if you have Python, python2-pip and libboost-dev installed, you should be able to install it under your user's home directory with: pip2 install --user git+https://github.com/dsacre/mididings.git The main mididings script will then end up in ~/.local/bin. Chris _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user