Thanks. Try Googling around for csound tutorials - there are many many great ones. I'll send along links to my favorites when I get home next week. Also, my web site (www.gregwilder.com) has a nice collection of csound oriented scripts, templates, and shell environment aliases created by Allan Schindler. These may help you get started by making complex tasks a bit easier. In particular, the templates are wonderful models for building your own orcs and scos. A word of caution - I haven't updated the downloadable tarball in almost 8 months. (It was originally designed for my students so they could install it over a clean FC1 and contains automated kernel updates etc - don't use it unless you know what you're doing!) I've recently built a new package which contains lots of usability improvements, dozens of my own scripts, and it's now distro independent. Give me a week and i'll post the new version. Greg -----Original Message----- From: Jerome Tuncer <columbiatwo@xxxxxxx> Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2005 11:16:46 To:greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx, A list for linux audio users <linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: [linux-audio-user] [LAM] Music Made with Linux I really like the tune Greg (-: You said you made it 85% with CSound. I'd like to learn CSound language. What would you advise? Cheers J? Greg Wilder a ?crit : > More Music - 100% built and bred in a GNU/Linux environment: > > http://www.gregwilder.com/media/vyserhad.ogg > > (Warning - large file 17M - over 10 minutes of music) > > App list: > Csound (about 85% of the DSP done here) > Cecilia (csound front end) > PVC (phase vocoding) > SMS (now CLAM) > Vspace (spatial sound processing tools) > SND (editor +) > Mix Views (editor +) > Audacity (before Ardour was stable) > > Digital sources were largely culled from the sound library at the > Eastman Computer Music Center. > > Enjoy! > Greg Wilder > www.gregwilder.com > > > > > 215-205-2893 www.gregwilder.com