Part of Tidal’s whole appeal has been that it allows electronic musicians – both very experienced ones and those new to any kind of production and performance – to express the complex ideas they hear in their heads. So despite the nerdy baggage of something called “live coding,” it’s really meaningful from a compositional, intuitive place. It’s a deep musical language born originally out of research into rhythm and pattern. Okay, first – Tidal Cycles is cool, as I’ve written before. But here’s one case where calling something “strudel” may be dead-on. It’s the creation of Felix Roos, based on work by yaxu (and others).Īs a fan of delicious sweet pastries, I’m dubious of technology trying to make itself sound as tasty. Here’s a complete intro to what this is and how it developed, though new users may want to skip to the tutorial below: Or for those in the know – It’s Tidal Cycles in the browser. Imagine a no-install, browser-based, free tool that lets you express musical ideas elegantly by typing simple code.
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