On Mon, Dec 24, 2007 at 07:14:11PM +0200, David Baron wrote: > On Monday 24 December 2007, Lars Luthman wrote: > > This JACK program is a port of the free VST plugin AZR-3. It is a > > tonewheel organ with drawbars, distortion and rotating speakers. The > > original was written by Rumpelrausch Täips. > > > > The organ has three sections, two polyphonic with 9 drawbars each and > > one monophonic bass section with 5 drawbars. The two polyphonic sections > > respond to events on MIDI channel 1 and 2, and an optional keyboard > > split function makes the bass section listen to the lower keys on > > channel 1. > > > > The three sections have separate sustain and percussion switches as well > > as separate volume controls, and the two polyphonic sections have > > separate vibrato settings. All three sections are mixed and sent through > > the distortion effect and the rotating speakers simulator, where the > > modulation wheel can be used to switch between fast and slow rotation, > > and the fast and slow rotation speeds themselves can be changed > > separately for the lower and upper frequencies. > > > > Get it at http://ll-plugins.nongnu.org/azr3/ > > Looks really nice. > > However, its MIDI is in the qjackctl jack-MIDI pane and the MIDI devices that > might feed it are NOT, but in the "ALSA" pane. Never the 'twain do meet :-( > > So, how do I play it? > I assume some of the programs (such as Muse or Rosegarden) will eventually > give me a MIDI port here (use as soft-synth) but my keyboard? > I use alsaseq2jackmidi, a simple little daemon that bridges between ALSA and JACK MiDI. http://ll-plugins.sourceforge.net/alsaseq2jackmidi.c There are more elaborate solutions out there but I haven't tried those yet. The latest jackd, I'm told, has a -X option that automatically makes JACK MIDI stuff appear in ALSA and vice versa. -ken _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user