On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 5:30 PM, Kim Cascone wrote: > I'm working on a percussion piece where I've generated the score by hand, > then had a percussionist perform all three parts (instruments) of the piece > into a midi file. > > I've got a library of around one hundred or so samples I designed that I > want to experiment with i.e. arbitrarily select samples to play in order to > build a little percussion ensemble for the piece. > > What I'd like to do is have ONE program (if possible) where I can import the > .mid file, create a multi-sample instrument (yes like a drum kit) and assign > any of my percussion samples to the key/note being played where I can tune, > pan and adjust volume for each key/note. > > I'd prefer to do it all 'under one roof' if at all possible. > > I looked into LMMS but don't think it really does what I need it to -- > besides, the LMMS documentation is very poor - so it turned me off to > researching it further. > > Can any one point me to a simple one app does all environment on Linux where > I can simply import a mid file and make a multi-sample instrument? > muse can do pretty much all of that. http://muse-sequencer.org/ I recommend checking out the muse2 SVN branch. Or you can combine hydrogen with muse, or with rosegarden. http://www.hydrogen-music.org/ http://www.rosegardenmusic.com/ Best, Orcan _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user