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Simulator for the early music synthesis programming language: MUSYS.

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MUSYSim

Simulator for the early music synthesis programming language: MUSYS.

MUSYS was an early music synthesis language designed by Peter Grogono for EMS in London in the early 1970s for composing and performing electronic music. More information and links to primary sources are available at https://esolangs.org/wiki/MUSYS

This is an attempt to create a MUSYS simulator to produce text and audio output from MUSYS source code as faithfully as possible to the original EMS software and hardware.

The most detailed source of technical information is the article "MUSYS: Software for an Electronic Music Studio" by Peter Grogono, in Software — Practice and Experience, 3, 1973. pp.369-383. doi:10.1002/spe.4380030410

Additionally, Peter Grogono's blog (Now archived) provides good context and history.

The related non-audio language, Mouse, has a relatively 'active' and enthusiastic hobbyist community and new code and interpreters exist for it. I am not aware of any other attempts to resurrect MUSYS.

Plan:

  1. Basic parser, operations and flow control - DONE
  2. Output to STDOUT - DONE
  3. Test and fix bugs - ONGOING
  4. Output compiled device/data pairs for audio (text octal format) DONE
  5. Converter that takes device instruction output and produces Nyquist code to synthesise audio DONE

Conversion to Nyquist

The given MUSYS example (from the blog) of a note with envelope:

O1 56 A1 12 E1 13 T1 14 E1 7 T1 1

converts (roughly) to Nyquist:

(play (mult (osc 84 0.35) (pwl-list '(0 0 0.13 1 0.27 1 0.34 0))))

Using my guess of Nyquist (MIDI) tone = MUSYS tone + 28, and interpreting E1 as an EMS Synthi style Envelope Shaper.

MUSYS tones range from 0-63. 0 is oscillator off. 32 would be middle C. The scale is apparently 8 octave chromatic, which leaves the highest and lowest notes unreachable. It sounds like there may have been a way to 'tune' an oscillator to reach these though.

To compile and play this example:

./musysim.py  <(echo -e "O1.56. A1.12. E1.13. T1.14. E1.7. T1.1.\n$"); ./sofkasim.py | ny

Example Usage:

./musysim.py examples/note.musys; ./sofkasim.py

Output:

['0170', '1414', '3015', '7416', '3007', '7401']
[Writing all data lists to musys.out...]
(set-control-srate 16000)(play (mult (seq (osc 84 0.35 *table* 0)) (seq (pwl-list '(0 0 0.13 1 0.27 1 0.34 0)))))

And with Nyquist installed (sudo apt-get install nyquist will work under Ubuntu):

./musysim.py examples/note.musys; ./sofkasim.py | ny

Should play a shaped note though your sound device lasting for 0.35 seconds.

Currently the code is in a proof-of-concept state, but is slowly being developed to add more of the original features as can be established from the available documents.

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Simulator for the early music synthesis programming language: MUSYS.

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