Related: Alex ('yaxu) went on to develop Tidal Cycles[1] (originally Tidal) in Haskell which is now reasonably popular (IIRC there's several albums available entirely done in TC.)<p>[1] <a href="https://tidalcycles.org" rel="nofollow">https://tidalcycles.org</a>
I feel like the world needs a more "serious" way to make music with code. Not just an experimental art project, but something that could replace Bitwig or other major DAWs.
unrelated but<p><a href="https://git.sr.ht/~nasser/8fl" rel="nofollow">https://git.sr.ht/~nasser/8fl</a><p>>8FL (pronounced either "eight-eff-ell" or "eighth floor") is a livecoding musical instrument for the Renoise music tracker digital audio workstation. It works by opening up a Fennel REPL into a running Renoise application and providing a library of music-focused sequence operations that can control and populate the active song. It is intended for live performances but can be used for algorithmic composition in the studio as well.
I've been having fun with <a href="https://glicol.org/demo" rel="nofollow">https://glicol.org/demo</a>, which drops you right into an environment you can start hacking at.