When Linnstrument Meets Kyma - video

US Kyma 7 now supports LinnStrument and Multidimensional Polyphonic Expression      22/10/15

Buying Choices
Affilliate Links help support the site

Kyma 7: LinnStrument & MPE Support from Symbolic Sound on Vimeo.

Symbolic Sound tells us that Kyma 7, the sound design environment, now offers plug-and-play support for Roger Linn Design's LinnStrument and other MPE-enabled MIDI instruments. The video shows Kyma 7 being controlled by Roger Linn Design's LinnStrument using the new MPE (Multidimensional Polyphonic Expression) MIDI standard.

Kyma automatically puts the LinnStrument into MPE mode when you connect it via USB-MIDI or MIDI 5-pin DIN (or via your computer, using Delora Software's Kyma Connect).  Once connected, any keyboard-controlled Sound in Kyma automatically sets the polyphony and responds to the LinnStrument -- no extra controllers are needed, and you don't have to select a special mode on the LinnStrument -- it's literally, plug it in and play. Here's more details direct from the Symbolic Sound press release


What is MPE?

Traditional MIDI note events have two dimensions -- pitch and velocity -- neither of which can be altered directly with the fingers once the key has gone down. But musicians performing with live electronics are driving the demand for new electronic instruments -- instruments whose touch, reliability, sensitivity, and responsiveness can begin to approach those of traditional acoustic instruments.

Over the last 10-15 years, more and more instrument makers have sought to incorporate continuous control over pitch and velocity and to add a third dimension of continuous control: timbre. One of the earliest entries in this new category was the Continuum fingerboard from Haken Audio (which has had plug-and-play support in Kyma since 2001).  More recently, Madrona Labs (Soundplane), Eigenlabs (Eigenharp), ROLI (Seaboard), and Roger Linn Design (LinnStrument) have been offering "keyboard-like" instruments that provide three dimensions of expressive, continuous control per finger.

But how is it possible to send these three-dimensional continuous polyphonic MIDI notes to a sound engine?  Haken Audio first used a FireWire protocol before switching over to a proprietary, optimized MIDI protocol.  Symbolic Sound and Madrona Labs used Open Sound Control (OSC) for Kyma Control and Soundplane, respectively.  But the growing proliferation of new instruments and proprietary protocols was threatening to become a nightmare for soft-and-hardware synthesizer makers to support.

Enter software developer Geert Bevin who, in January of this year, started working with key industry professionals on a new, more expressive MIDI specification called MPE: Multidimensional Polyphonic Expression.  The new MPE standard has already been implemented on Roger Linn Design's LinnStrument, the Madrona Labs Soundplane, the ROLI Rise Seaboard, and several other instrument makers are currently in the process of adding an MPE-mode to their instruments.

With MPE, the music industry now has a standard protocol for communicating between expressive controllers and the sound hardware and software capable of sonically expressing the subtlety, responsiveness, and live interaction offered by these controllers.

Kyma -- Interactive, responsive, and live


Kyma, with its legendary audio quality, vast synthesis codebase and deep access to detailed parameter control, is the ideal sound engine to pair with these new, more responsive controller interfaces for live expressive performance, and Symbolic Sound has a long history of working with instrument makers to provide tight, seamless integration and bi-directional communication between these new instruments and Kyma.

In addition to its graphical signal flow editor, file editors, and Sound Library, Kyma 7 also provides several environments in which you can create an instrument where the synthesis, processing, parameter-mapping, and even the mode of interaction can evolve over time during a performance:

  • In the Multigrid (displayed on the iPad during the video), you can switch instantly between sources, effects, and combinations of the two with no interruption in the audio signal. Perform live, inspired in the moment, with infinite combinatorial possibilities.
  • In the Kyma 7 Timeline you can slow down or stop the progression of time to synchronize your performance with other performers, with key events, or with features extracted from an audio signal during your performance.
  • Using the Tool you can create a state machine where input conditions trigger the evaluation of blocks of code (for example, the game-of-life displayed on the LinnStrument during the closing credits of the video is being controlled by a Tool).
  • Kyma also provides a realtime parameter language called Capytalk where you can make parameters depend on one another or control subsets of parameters algorithmically.
  • It's easy to add a new parameter control, simply type in the desired controller name preceded by an exclamation point -- a control is automatically created for you, and it even generates its own widget in a Virtual Control Surface which can be remapped to external controllers (through MIDI, 14-bit MIDI, or OSC).  This makes it easy to augment your live MPE controllers with other MIDI and OSC controllers or with tablet controller apps.


Pricing and Availability:
Kyma 7.04 is available today as a free update for Symbolic Sound customers who have a registered copy of Kyma 7.

More information:

 


Symbolic Sound Social

More From: SYMBOLIC SOUND
Even more news...


 

Want Our Newsletter?



More...

And more


5 Firmware Updates that Totally Changed the Game 

Revisions that turned synths into brand new machines


New developments for Waldorf's M 

Waldorf's hybrid synth has quite the development story


The Magic of 1980's Pinball Soundtracks 

Suzanne Ciani's captivating sci-fi soundscape


Sega sound for now


Physical modelling instrument


Hey there, we use Cookies to customize your experience on Sonicstate.com