I would like to have a python implementation of a musical instrument library (for instance, a piano object) that I can use to convert a list of notes and a duration into sou
A student of mine has just started using mingus to do just this so here's quick guide on how to get going on linux (ubuntu):
Install fluidsynth and mingus if you don't have them already:
$
sudo apt-get install fluidsynth
$
sudo easy_install mingus
Now you should be able to open python and type:
>>> from mingus.midi import fluidsynth
>>> fluidsynth.init('/usr/share/sounds/sf2/FluidR3_GM.sf2',"alsa")
This imports the necessary stuff from mingus and initialises fluidsynth to play through alsa (not jack which is the default). Then:
>>> fluidsynth.play_Note(64,0,100)
...and you should hear a note played on the piano (arguments are: note number, channel number and velocity).
For more information go here:
https://code.google.com/p/mingus/wiki/tutorialFluidsynth
A subset of @Marcelos answer: http://code.google.com/p/mingus/
mingus is a package for Python used by programmers, musicians, composers and researchers to make and investigate music. At the core of mingus is music theory, which includes topics like intervals, chords, scales and progressions.
The MIDI package can save and load MIDI files, and -last but not least- provides a general purpose sequencer for all the containers and a FluidSynth sequencer subclass. This allows you to play all your data structures straight from Python in just a couple of lines. Most of the icky timing and MIDI code has been abstracted away for you, leaving a clean, relatively simple API.