On Thu, Jul 22, 2010 at 06:14:38PM -0400, Mike Blackstock wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 12:02 AM, Graham Percival
> wrote:
>
> > You might be interested in the second chapter of my Masters
> > thesis, which is about using Strasheela to create
> Wow, thx. Is it online?
http://percival-music.ca
Wow, thx. Is it online?
On Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 12:02 AM, Graham Percival
wrote:
> You might be interested in the second chapter of my Masters
> thesis, which is about using Strasheela to create
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On Tue, 20 Jul 2010, Graham Percival wrote:
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 06:17:51PM +0200, Martin Tarenskeen wrote:
But thinking about this little project I was wondering: Would it be
possible to write a lilypond input file, using just pure Lilypond syntax
and some Scheme magick, that would produc
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 03:47:26PM -0400, Mike Blackstock wrote:
> Me too I've long been interested in this; I'd like to be able to
> generate endless sight-reading exercises/material for guitarists,
> perhaps in the form of duos with the computer playing one of the parts
> just to keep things inte
On Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 06:17:51PM +0200, Martin Tarenskeen wrote:
> But thinking about this little project I was wondering: Would it be
> possible to write a lilypond input file, using just pure Lilypond syntax
> and some Scheme magick, that would produce a different score each time
> you pro
Good luck with Strasheela! I keep trying to crack my brain over it,
and it just has not happened yet. Lilypond I get. Python I get.
Mozart has been tough for me...
Josh Parmenter had been working on a SuperCollider-to-lily project.
I'm not sure where he's at with it, but if you know SC, that co
Me too I've long been interested in this; I'd like to be able to
generate endless sight-reading exercises/material for guitarists,
perhaps in the form of duos with the computer playing one of the parts
just to keep things interesting. I've downloaded but haven't yet
looked at Strasheela
(http://str
On Tue, 20 Jul 2010, Mike Solomon wrote:
For what it's worth...
I do a lot of exactly this: aleatoric composition in Lilypond.
()
I use Python for all of my aleatory and have Python spit out
lilypond-parseable code. There is no good reason for this aside from the
fact that, for me, th
For what it's worth...
I do a lot of exactly this: aleatoric composition in Lilypond. My "seven
pieces for seunge hye", which is somewhere on www.apollinemike.com/mike,
uses this in pieces 1, 4, and 6. My most recent piece, "Norman (12 ans) à
la dernière répétition avant sa Bar Mitzvah", also do
Hi,
I'm thinking of writing a little fun application based on "Mozart's
Musikalisches Wuerfelspiel". The idea is to compose a 16-bar Waltz using a
pair of (virtual) dice and a table of musical fragments.
I already wrote such a game for Mup ( I you have Mup, go
to http://linux.martintarenskee
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