On 07/19/2011 07:00 AM, Rustom Mody wrote: > On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 4:37 PM, Robin Gareus <robin@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> >> Actually http://www.sonicvisualiser.org/ may be the tool of choice. >> Here's a video where it is used to slow down some Bach so that you can >> hear the "beating/pulsing" introduce by equal-temperament tuning: >> http://www.youtube.com/user/mcldx#p/a/u/0/uOOhvw89jc4 >> >> > Hey Thanks! sonic visualizer seems to be what I want. > Showing temperament variations visually is high on my list of what I want to > do though that video is not doing such a good job of it. indeed, even though one gets the gist. Well, here's your chance to make a better one :) The videos at http://www.sonicvisualiser.org/videos.html are better quality, but there's nothing there about temperament-analysis or demonstrating analogies of patterns at different orders of magnitude of frequency. > Any other suggestions for that will be most welcome! maybe http://clam-project.org/ http://isophonics.net/sawa/ is a web-interface that can do so (alas, the website's upload function seems to broken at the moment) but under the hood it uses the http://www.vamp-plugins.org/ as does sonic-visualizer. Maybe s.o. else on the list knows one. > On the other hand I can put take Indian classical music, slow it down with > sonicV and get more microtonal distinctions than one can easily hear at > normal tempo. sure, it's definitly a good tool to hands-on explore the "wider ramifications of music". have fun, robin _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user