Bazsites.com Csound
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Csound Editor - Flavio Tordini's integrated development environment for Csound.
- cSounds.com - Info and articles about this program. Includes the related magazine, catalog, book and manual.
- CSound Magazine - News, tips, tutorials.
- CsoundAV - Realtime version of Csound supports audio, MIDI, video, and animated 3D graphics. Successor of DirectCsound.
- Richard Boulanger - Professor of music synthesis at the Berklee College of Music and author of "Csound" - a programming language designed and optimized for sound rendering and signal processing.
- Syd - Software Synthesizer - A software synthesizer for Mac and Windows. Similar to CSound in capabilities, but easier to use.
- Richey, John - (1961- ), Wooster, Ohio. Includes list of works, Csound instruments, and an essay on new music culture.
Wikipedia Articles
- Csound - Csound is a computer programming language for dealing with sound, also known as a sound compiler or an audio programming language. It is called Csound because it is written in the C programming language, as opposed to some of its predecessors.
- Pure:dyne - pure:dyne, AKA p:d, is a Linux distribution based on a modified core of the [Linux Live CD] distributon. It is dedicated to live audiovisual processing and streaming, and focusses largely on the [[Pure Data audio synthesis system, although it also includes SuperCollider, Csound as well as live video-processing systems such as Packet Forth and Fluxus.
- Loscil - Loscil is the electronic/ambient music project of Scott Morgan, from Vancouver, BC. The name Loscil is taken the name from the "looping oscillator" function (loscil) in Csound.
- Haskore - Haskore is a set of Haskell modules for creating music as MIDI, CSound, Audio files. Because of the concise programming style of Haskell the composer can still concentrate on composing rather than programming.
- Unit generator - Unit Generators (or ugens) are the basic formal unit in many MUSIC-N-style computer music programming languages. They are sometimes called opcodes (particularly in Csound), though this expression is not accurate in that these are not machine-level instructions.