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Winter by Phil Jackson.
Visit his home page. This is a piece with four voices in an Hypoaeolian scale. The first voice leads, and the other voices are based on Henon, which is a good accompanier. Because the duration is Popcorn in all cases the result is a number of chords following each other with different speed.
Phil has added an interesting fractal music page to his home page.
Listen.
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SOS by Forest Fang.
Visit his home page. In this contribution Forest Fang uses all aspects of a Musical Generator. This yields an interesting composition. At about two third of the composition the two flutes sound alternating consonant and dissonant, a very exciting effect. Listen.
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Brandenburg Chip by
Casey van Tieghem.
Visit his home page.
Casey dedicated a complete page to algorithmic music. It is worth to have a look at it. You can hear and download other examples as well. I liked the Brandenburg Chip the most.
"This one
sounds a little like Bach, sort of
like Brandenburg Concerto. If you slow down the tempo, and change the
patches to violins it sounds
almost like chamber music. I based this on the Chip fractal - with no
looping. The duration aspect
is either a 1 or a 2 because the minimum was 1 and the maximum was set at 2."
Listen
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The nested spiral by Forest Fang.
Visit his home page. Alas he didn't want to share the .tmg file but I liked his Real Audio contribution so much that I added his contribution. Listen to his Real Audio contribution (509 KB).
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Tibet by
Giacomino C Parkinson. Visit his home page.
"I sampled my own pictures to create the blue and green file.
I listen to a lot world music. I felt the spirit of the prayer wheel."
Listen
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Fractal by Arnold Reinders.
Visit his home page.
A hefty beginning. Based mainly on Lorenz and Henon. I am sorry that my first contribution does not contain the original tMG file. It was created with an earlier version of a Musical Generator. My system crashed and I had to rebuild a Musical Generator and was not able to recreate the original music again. Listen
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CDenisa Example Points by
Denis Odinokov.
"I write music for creation of psycho-acoustic compositions. The created midi is a perfect
approach for a hum noise to stimulate the brain with binaural beat frequencies."Listen
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Fractal AAahAAA
by
Jonas Eckerman.
Visit his homepage.
This is a good example of how a Musical Generator can be used as input for
other sequencers (SONAR in this case). The resulting MP3 is quite impressive.
Listen (5 MB mp3)
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Fugue by
Arnold Reinders.
Visit his home page.
A fugue based on the Chip and Martin fractals. Listen
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New age by
Arnold Reinders.
Visit his home page.
Some new age music using synthesizer sounds. Listen