Clark - Superscope https://youtu.be/TKYrwuxLZtY
Clark - Riff Through The Fog https://youtu.be/efnsrLg03e4?si=grC1M4XlXdV1L6VB
Long ago I did like you and converted an CRT TV to accept audio on the deflection coils (left, right -> X,Y). I can highly recommend 2 particular songs for that setup:
1) Cathedral by VanHalen
2) Lunatic Fringe by Red Rider
By all means use a CD if you can rather than MP3 - I'm not sure how degraded the MP3 would be so maybe it's fine.
> Oscilloscope Music is music that creates it's own visuals.
> The same signal that goes to the speakers is also fed into an analog oscilloscope to draw green glowing lines.
> The left and right audio channels correspond to the horizontal and vertical axes of the image.
> Parametric functions are meticulously crafted to create synesthetic geometries in a lab aesthetic that is retro and futuristic at the same time.
> The tricky part is to create images that sound good and vice versa, which demands novel methods of synthesis, mixing and mastering.
This is exactly was TFA does.
you must have a very unique definition of music. by every definition I've looked up, this meets all of them.
because surely you're not disputing the oscilloscope part of it
Yes, I'm disputing the oscilloscope part of it. An oscilloscope does not plot pitch vs time. You could devise circuitry to do something like that.
Having plugged audio directly into an oscilloscope, I can say that's not how it works. Well, not all of it. The into seemed more like it might actually be left/right audio into a scope, but the other parts did not.
You're right, it doesn't, and that's not what's happening here. It uses the X/Y deflection mode of the oscilloscope, plotting left channel vs right channel.
If you don't believe it, play it on an oscilloscope yourself. (I have!)
i'd suggest you do it again before making baseless accusations. they provide you the ability to download the audio. they even provide a bit of software to drive lasers with the data.
I hate double replying, but I was busy
Does anybody know if the executable will run under Linux?
It’s been around longer and the overlap might not be as large as you’d expect