

Tweet that and put it in your SuperCollider! SuperCollider is actually three programs: The text editor you are looking at (also referred to as the IDE or Integrated Development Environment), the language (sclang or the 'client' app), and the server, which does the actual synthesis and calculation of audio. It lets you use the relatively large display of an iPad to control the parameters of ‘Synth Tones’ on the Jupiter 50 or 80.

Here’s a video introduction to the JP Synth Editor: JP Synth Editor is a useful idea.
SUPERCOLLIDER IPAD PATCH
The compositions are self-referentially named, with titles like: Roland today introduced JP Synth Editor (App Store link) a free iPad patch editor for the Jupiter-50 and Jupiter-80 synthesizers. input from his to controllers: the joystick and the iPad (running Lemur).
SUPERCOLLIDER IPAD CODE
Many of these pieces are actually generative, so if you re-run the source code (the track titles) you get a new piece of music. As mentioned above, Plutas modular SuperCollider instrument is a large focus. Pleasantly surprised by the reaction, and “not wanting this stuff to vanish into the ether” he has recently collated the best pieces into a special download for The Wire’s online readership here. It started as a curious project, when live coding enthusiast and Toplap member Dan Stowell started tweeting tiny snippets of musical code using SuperCollider. Supercollider 140 is a free album of Twitter music – audio pieces composed of Twitter-sized snippets of SuperCollider code. Interactive iPad book by Joo Martinho Moura. It will help you advance your skills in creating sophisticated visualizations while working with audio-visual systems. Could you score a piece of music with 140 characters or less? Next Post: SuperCollider GUI Design Project News, Sound 6 thoughts on Spirits iPad, iPhone, Games Preview Martin Jordan says: at 20:39.
