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Found 2 results

  1. Hi, Forgive me for these simple questions, but I'm curious to know what's the best way to display all the libraries I have? For example, I'm now trying to build new libraries that includes ambituses of custom-built instruments I will use, rhythmic patterns I am developing, and modes/scales I will be using. I have the following questions: 1. I'm trying to understand the difference between library, def-library, and create-library. I am particularly interested in better understanding def-library and create-library. Are the two functions very different? 2. If I want to see all my rhythm libraries, for example, how can I see what I've already got on my computer? Many thanks.
  2. I'm ok (not great) with music and algorithms, but I know *nothing* about Lisp, so please excuse me if I'm completely off base... I'd like to set up a system where I can tag parts of midi files and then use random weights to create new pieces that are similar to the source material. For example, I'd like to create a new melody from the openings of three different pieces where each of the source motifs are tagged with something like "dark" "rhythmic" "complex" In my day job the way I'd do this is to have all the motifs, melodies, basslines, chord progressions, descriptive tags, etc. stored in a database, and I'd run a query: "SELECT * from motifs WHERE tag LIKE 'dark' LIMIT 3. And then I'd basically use random numbers to select which of the resultant notes would play and when. I'd then rate the result, and if it's good enough INSERT it back in to the database to provide a new generation of material So my question is, would I need a database in OpusModus, or is there a "Lispy-way" to do this kind of genetic manipulation? If I need a database, any recommendations? Thanks for your patience!! Lance
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