This week i wrote a little and ugly JSON file formater in #Csound itself. No fun at all! But it works.
The aim is, to save and recall analysing sessions for some through composed music with live electronics.
So in some way i needed to save and recall the data from the analyser.
After writing the JSON file formater i noticed that csound is not equipped with file reading opcodes and i did not want to implement it by myself via writing a plug-in in C for this...
A little thread on what i did this week music and art wise:
One big part of my work right now is developing a Audio Analyser Tool.
I do this in #Csound and the Cabbage framework, which is really nice! Props to Rory, the developer of this tool!
This tool will be used to extract features of live input or the input in a DAW track and send the feature data via OSC to any destination.
A nice Disquiet Junto project to take my mind off my head cold. A track made using a 1920 recording of "Nina" by Hans Kindler. Lots of layers, mixed and filtered with Csound. Not my usual kind of sound, but I really like it! Cheers! https://soundcloud.com/matthew-m-conroy/nina-disquiet0729
Made as part of Disquiet Junto 0729 https://llllllll.co/t/disquiet-junto-project-0729-community-rework-nina
A track made utilizing a 1920 recording of "Nina" by Hans Kindler as the source material. https://archive.org/details/78_nina_hans-kindler-g-b-pergolesi_gbia0055100a For Disquite Junto 0729: https
My very final track for #Noisevember. I've had a great time churning out noise this month, I hope you've enjoyed listening. This last one is a calming coda of swelling noise, composed using a recursive method I've been playing with for a while. Has a nice long quiet tail. Cheers! https://soundcloud.com/matthew-m-conroy/the-very-last-one
A noisy track made with recursion. Swells of noise.
#Noisevember is almost over! Here's another guitar-based thing with live Csound processing, another experiment in getting waveforms to interfere with each other. Using a new method here, but it's a little subtle, but the whole thing came out nice, I think. Enjoy! https://soundcloud.com/matthew-m-conroy/guitarcsound
#Noisevember! This one's not noisy, but we're all friends here, right? I continue to try to understand ways to have two signals "interfere with each other spectrally" and this was an experiment with one way that involves the exponential function. https://soundcloud.com/matthew-m-conroy/something-with-the-exponential-function
An experiment with a way to make two signals "interfere with each other spectrally".