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Re: [MMM] Re: Java Microtuning Organ

🔗JedoSoft <donkers@...>

1/3/2007 1:01:48 PM

Robin,

You are right, I mistyped the url, thank you for noticing. The link you pasted is indeed correct:

http://www.geocities.com/jeroendonkers/JMTOrgan/

Jeroen

----- Original Message -----
From: Robin Perry
To: MakeMicroMusic@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, January 03, 2007 8:37 PM
Subject: [MMM] Re: Java Microtuning Organ

Thanks very much. I couldn't get to your link as typed in your
message.. Here it is pasted again.

http://www.geocities.com/jeroendonkers/JMTOrgan/

Cheers,

Robin

--- In MakeMicroMusic@yahoogroups.com, "Jeroen Donkers" <donkers@...>
wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I am new to this list. As an amateur Harpsichord player, I am
> interested in historical temperaments. Since retuning my instrument
> takes me about 45 minutes, I rather use my Roland keyboard and my
> computer to experiment. To support microtuning and soundfonts I
wrote
> a Java program that might be useful for this community too.
>
> The program is called "Java Microtuning Organ" (JMTOrgan) and can be
> downloaded for free at www.jedosoft.info (the same as:
> http://www.geocities.com/jeroedonkers/JMTOrgan).
>
> JMTOrgan takes the input of the midi keyboard and relays it to a
> soundfont-enabled soundcard (I have a cheap Soundblaster Audigy).
> Meanwhile it applies microtuning (12-note scales only) and a general
> pitch height. JMTOrgan reads sf2 files to extract the names of the
> presets, which is especially convienent with the Jeux 1.4 organ font
> which contains over 200 presets.
>
> The program is intended for practical use by mucisians - you can set
> up a stop board for a piece and switch between presets by pressing
the
> spacebar.
>
> You can record the midi-stream and save it into a midi file. Using
> Synthfont, the midi file can be transformed into mp3.
>
> Jeroen Donkers
>

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