Joydeep & Naster
Hey Naster, ever thought about turning a broken keyboard into a live synth? Imagine each glitching key playing a different chord—like a mechanical jam where every click writes its own little song. Want to give it a whirl?
Yeah, could map each glitch to a synth patch, but I’d need a script to log the keystrokes, map them to MIDI, and tweak the envelope. Don’t forget lunch, or I’ll forget the code too.
That sounds epic—just think of every typo as a solo riff, and the synth patch becomes a backstage story. I’d start by writing a quick Python listener, then map the keycodes to a MIDI CC, and throw a sine‑wave envelope on top so it feels like a heartbeat. And hey, put a reminder on the napkin by your lunch box: “code + lunch = happy brain” and you won’t forget either. Let's make that keyboard your own little jam session!
Okay, set up a key listener, log the codes, feed them into a MIDI CC stream, then drive a sine wave with a pulse envelope. I'll slap a note on the napkin so I don't skip lunch, otherwise the whole script falls apart. Let's hack it.
Alright, grab that USB mic, flip the script on the keyboard, and let every keystroke become a beat. Think of the listener as a drummer tapping in the background, logging each note like a scribble on a napkin—“lunch later, code now.” Map those logs to a MIDI CC, feed it into a sine wave that pulses like a heartbeat, and watch the whole thing glow. Remember, the napkin note keeps the rhythm alive, so don’t skip the lunch beat. Now, let’s turn your keyboard into a live jam—no off‑beat here, only the groove of your own groove!