Whoa, thanks for those links. I'm a newbie csounder myself, and if anything at all, this sounds extremely interesting. The only problem is, I get addicted to playing with stuff like this and never get any recording done :) Jon On Wed, 26 Jan 2005 17:11:54 +0100, Emiliano Grilli <emillo@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > mercoled?, 26 gennaio 2005 alle 16:26:47, Johannes M Ringheim ha scritto: > > > Anyone know if such a service exist? Would this be a good idea? I'm also > > wondering if the "convolution" tecnique, wich I've never heard of > > before, could be useful in connection with such a reverb system. > > Yes, I've used only with csound (there's an opcode called convolve), but > brutefir should be a dedicated app to do convolution. There's a lot of > impulses on the web to use for convolution based reverberation: > > http://altiverb.daw-mac.com/library.html > http://www.audioease.com/IR/index.html > http://www.digifreq.com/digifreq/discussdetail.asp?TopicID=4092 > http://www.cksde.com/p_6_250.htm > http://purgatorycreek.com/convolution.html > http://www.xs4all.nl/~fokkie/IR.htm#Downloads > http://www.memi.com/echochamber/responses/index.html > http://www.phonmeister.de/samp.htm > http://www.ressl.com.ar/realreverb/index_old.html > http://pcangelo.ramsete.com/Public/IMP-RESP/ > http://www.memi.com/echochamber/responses/index.html > > (those link are not controlled, some may not exist anymore) > > Here is a description of the process with csound: > > http://kevindumpscore.com/docs/csound-manual/convolve.html > > I'm not that expert, but I've done it in the past and the results were > impressive, though I don't know if it can be done in realtime (probably > yes, with a powerful machine) > > Best regards, > -- > Emiliano Grilli > Linux user #209089 > http://www.emillo.net >