new cSound music available

Greetings,

   I have recently updated my website with samples,
SCO/ORC/CSD files,
etc. for a collection of new music created in large part
in cSound.
In fact, high quality (FLAC, etc.) versions of all songs on the CD
can
be downloaded from archive.org as well.  A main source of learning
and
inspiration has been from those who have shared the music, CSDs,
etc.
in the same way, and so I seek to repay and contribute to the
cSound
community in kind.

  The main website for this musical project
is:

        http://www.obversemusic.com

  The
direct link to all the music on archive.org is:

        http://www.archive.org/details/SaturninSektor

 
Comments and questions, whether good or bad, are of course
welcome.

Regards,
-S

blue 0.123.1

Hi All,

Menno Knevel was kind enough to report an issue and it revealed a
couple of major bugs for JMask. blue users interested in JMask are
highly encouraged to upgrade to 0.123.1, available at:

http://www.csounds.com/stevenyi/blue

Thanks very much to Menno!
steven



[CHANGE LOG]

Notes for 0.123.1<
[released 2008.06.10]

Steven Yi———————————————————————–

blue

[fix] – JMask

-Duration was not being set for Mask, Accumulator, and Quantizer; if
a table was used for any values in those modifiers, the duration of
those tables were being calculated as if they were 1 beat long, so
any values generated after 1 beat would pretty much use the value
set at the end of the table; duration is now set correctly

-Dropdowns in UI’s did not initialize to the value that the
edited object currently held when first populating interface


Slipmat pre-alpha 0.01.0


I’ve just released the latest version of Slipmat:

https://sourceforge.net/projects/slipmat/

This version comes with three new examples, including one that uses a basic
Java GUI. Four out of the five examples are now pre-rendered as CSDs for
convenience. There are also a handful of new synth Modules to play with.

The documentation has been improved, including better Javadoc support. The
Javadocs are not pre-rendered as to keep the size of the release to a
minimum, so you’ll have to generate them yourself. Many IDEs, including
NetBeans and Eclipse, will generate them for you.

There is also the PseudoTutorial example that gives a broad overview of the
design of Slipmat and how to use it. And last, here is a blog I wrote about
Slipmat:

http://www.thumbuki.com/20080530/introducing-slipmat-for-java-and-csound.html

Best,
Jake
—-
The Csound Blog
http://www.thumbuki.com/csound/blog/