- Preprocessor Source Code: sing53.mac
- which creates the input to Csound: sing53.csd
- which is reprocessed by Csound to add crescendo and decrescendo effects: sing53.csd
- Finally, it is convolved by Csound with an impulse response file of Teatro Alcorcon in Madrid from Angelo Farina: convolv.csd
- Converted to MP3: version 1 slower version 2
Microtonal Music is music using more than 12 tones per octave. I compose music using Csound and a preprocessor I wrote in Turbo Pascal. I post small updates as the compositions are being created, and a few final versions once I'm done. I strive towards music that could be played if we had the instruments capable of playing the notes. Think of it as "fake but accurate".
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Source Code for Csounders
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Whisper Song in 53 EDO - now 5.26% slower!
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
Whisper Song in 53 EDO
I think this one is finished for now. This is a piece for Finger Piano, Bass Flute, Cello, and Dry Spring. The Dry Spring is an amplified percussion instrument I made back in the 1970's for live performance. All the sounds are made with Csound as a sample based synthesizer. Tuning is 53 tone to the octave equal divisions of octave (53-EDO)
The structure is kind of like a theme in C major, with a bridge in E minor, A minor, D minor, G minor. The E is a 5:4 above the C at 1:1, so a circle of fourths ends up on a G that is slightly flat. I solve that one by sliding up a step from 30 to 31. See the notes in Sagittal notation in the chart on the right. Each is moved around by the 53rd root of 2, the single step of 53 EDO, a ratio of 77:76. These steps are so small that it is hard to notice that the key has modulated by one, two, or three steps, and then back down.
One section at the end includes a longer bridge that includes the keys shown on the left. They start at kind of an A flat, and move up by fourths until they hit the G a 3:2 above the C at 1:1.
The finger piano samples are from an instrument I made in the 1970's also, when I was playing more live. It has a nice solid base and piano like middle, and harp like highs. By truncating the envelope, I can make it sound more like a Fender Jazz Bass with plastic strings. This envelope is shown below.
The end includes arpeggios of the finger piano with an envelope like the chart at the bottom.