On Thu, 28 Jul, 2005 at 05:01PM +0000, Greg Wilder spake thus: > No. I only had access to them as a student. Since then, I've been using the Dan Dean Orchestral libraries. They're amazing but they ain't cheap... > > I have plans to create a high-res (24bit/88.2khz) library from my new Boesendorder 225 but it's a huge project that will take months to complete. I'd like to keep it "open" using the Creative Commons deal. Anyone else interested in contributing to something like this? Hell yes! I've been thinking that we could do with some kind of repository of open sampels. I have noises and beats I could submit. Half the time, I create a beat or a sound I like and then can't decide what to do about it, so it just sits on my HD. At least with something like this there would be a chance for other people to make use of it. What kind of creative commons do you think would work best? Sharealaike, no attribution would be my vote, I think. Also, the 24/88 might be worth thinking about. I'm wondering if we could maybe have a 24/48 source file and options to download a 16/44 or high quality ogg, converted on demand? We should do this. I'm excited now. > Greg > > From: Emmanuel saracco <esaracco@xxxxxxx> > Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2005 11:45:32 > To:Greg Wilder <greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Cc:linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] [LAM] Music Made with Linux > > Le Mercredi 27 Juillet 2005 17:08, Greg Wilder a ?crit?: > > Hi Greg, > > [...] > > > Digital sources were largely culled from the sound library at the > > Eastman Computer Music Center. > > Are those sounds available on the archive downloadable here: > http://www.gregwilder.com/software.html? > > If not: are they downloadable from somewhere? > > Thanks, > > Bye > -- "I'd crawl over an acre of 'Visual This++' and 'Integrated Development That' to get to gcc, Emacs, and gdb. Thank you." (By Vance Petree, Virginia Power)