Integra Live is a new application that’s designed to it easy to use interactive audio processing to create new music. According to the developers, it ‘opens up new possibilities for those seeking an entry point into interactive live electronics’.
With Integra Live you don’t have to write code or patch objects to create interesting live processing. Neither do you have to deal with the complexities of finding, loading and learning external plugins. The software provides a library of built-in audio processing modules to let you get started with interactive audio.
With the Integra Live routing panel, anything can be connected everything else. External MIDI controllers can be routed to module parameters, or parameters can be routed to each other.
This allows complex one-to-many mappings and advanced operations such as automatic event triggering through a single simple interface. Parameters have non-linear ranges where you’d expect, allowing for more musical control over details such as filter cutoff and delay times. Scaling is of course fully adjustable.
For those who like to express themselves through text, all module parameters in Integra Live can be scripted through Integra script a lightweight superset of the Lua language. In just a few lines of simple code a parameter can be set to change randomly or conditionally based on the values of other parameters.
Integra Live has been built from the ground up using open source software and open standards. The Integra Live audio processing host runs in the Pure Data engine, communicating with the Integra server via Open Sound Control messaging. The graphical front end is written using the open source Apache Flex framework. Integra Live itself is freely available, with installers for OS X & Windows, under the GNU GPL license with source code available on Sourceforge.
See the Integra Live site for more info.
If you’ve used Integra Live, let us know what you think of it!
via palmsounds
This looks rather interresting! Keen to give it a try. Looks alot like FL studio’s Patcher.
Just downloaded, I’m glad to see OSX 10.6 is supported.
Like to see this on Linux.
You can compile it from source, go grab it from Sourceforge =]
Does anyone sell more hours in the day? Because they would be really useful so I could learn all these modular audio environments.
Once you learn one, you pretty much learn them all.. At least I was right at home with this one. I’ve used Reaktor and synthedit before. This is lot easier though, because modules aren’t so low-level and there’s not so many of them.
can anyone who has tried this and audulus provide some insights as to how they compare with each other?
This is more performance-oriented than Audulus. It’s not as flexible, but I can see myself using this for jams and stuff. Pity it lacks VST/AU support.
Seems great performance-wise, but available modules fall little short. It really needs a step sequencer! I suppose i could script one with built-in language, but i’m not familiar with it (yet). Is there a resource pool for script sharing?
I tried installing the Windows version and keep getting MSVCR100.dll not found. It helpfully suggests that reinstalling it may solve the problem.
But it doesn’t.
Just installed it and looking at the potential of the fx modules I’m thinking about very creative new ways to approach sound design. Besides that I’m hoping to find a way to puzzle it in a Ableton setup because of the lack of VST/AU.
Soundflower…