Just so happens I am staring at a Bob Moog original and a homemade job in the studio. They are quite hard o make yourself mainly due to tuning them and using components of a quality so they don't go out of tune! Yes you tune a theremin!! There are lots of places that sell kits reasonably on the net.
Although you will need a soundcard output of a reasonable quality which may add to your costs If you want more details ask Are you looking at making a midi controllable "sound-a-like" or a featured Theremin?
#WILL SOUNDPLANT WORK IN THE BACKGROUND SOFTWARE#
Getting spares and parts is becoming increasingly hard! You say you have been using soundplant does this mean you have a pc at your disposal? You can get various software solutions samplers varying greatly in price and features. If you decide to purchase one of these I recommend you search for one with adequate memory and a fitted hard drive. Depending on how long a sampling time you require many of the older Akai's s springs to mind offer the basic facilities you require just with less sampling time. Thus working like you see soundplant but being triggered from midi commands. Using either of these products you simply assign an audio sample to a midi note basic explanation. Depending on how maximised they have been you can obtain up 25 minutes of audio samples loaded into memory approx mb RAM or use a useful feature called virtual sampling. For more money I would go for either the s or s from akai. The keyboard I used miniature relays to switch the contacts. The drum trigger works well alas only for 12 inputs per piece using piezo sounders to trigger the module which then sends the midi. Posted 17 July - PM Hey, I have completed a similar project using both a modified midi keyboard and a drum trigger module as trigger surfaces for a sampler. Moving the light beam to the MIDI keyboard has worked, but I can't find software that will allow me to record my own sounds and assign them to one key only say Middle C for a drum beat, D for a cymbal, E for a guitar riff. This partly worked but sometimes multiple key presses appeared and stopped the track too soon. My first prototype of the light beam unit used the brains from a membrane computer keyboard to get a letter key press into Soundplant.
#WILL SOUNDPLANT WORK IN THE BACKGROUND FULL#
Full Question: I have been asked to design a system for disabled performers up to 30 to perform music live on stage by moving an arm, head, leg or foot. Register Now! of 1 You cannot start a new topic You cannot reply to this topic. Soundplant has not been rated by our users yet.Jump to content.
Soundplant runs on the following operating systems: Windows. It was initially added to our database on. The latest version of Soundplant is 42, released on.
Soundplant is a Shareware software in the category Miscellaneous developed by Marcel Blum. Use Soundplant as a performance, presentation, or installation tool, as a drum pad, to mix together tracks in realtime, as an educational aid, to trigger sound effects or background tracks during a show, to create music or loops, to sketch sound designs, or to give new life to old sounds - all via an input device you've been practicing on for as long as you've been typing Overview
Soundplant is a digital audio performance program that turns your computer keyboard (yes, your QWERTY keyboard) into a versatile, low latency, multitrack sample-triggering device and playable musical instrument, allowing the assignment of sound files of any format and size onto virtually all keyboard keys, giving you hours of instantly-playing random access audio at your fingertips with no extra hardware needed.