Awesome
TinyMusic
A simple, lightweight music synth/sequencer in JavaScript using the Web Audio API.
Here's a quick, hideous demo.
You can also see (a slightly modified version of) TinyMusic in action in this js13k entry.
Available on npm via npm install tinymusic
.
Changelog
Version 1.0.0 removes some weirdness around module format.
If you put dist/TinyMusic.js
directly into your page with no
RequireJS/browserify/etc, you'll get a global object called TinyMusic
that
exposes Note
and Sequence
.
Otherwise, you should be able to require('tinymusic')
with browserify,
or require('./node_modules/tinymusic/dist/TinyMusic.js')
with RequireJS,
which will give you an object containing both Note
and Sequence
.
Quick Start
Getting started is pretty easy. Creating and playing a melody only takes a few lines of code.
// create a new Web Audio API context
var ac = new AudioContext();
// set the playback tempo (120 beats per minute)
var tempo = 120;
// create some notes ('<Note Name> <Beat Length>')
// q = quarter note, h = half note (more on that later)
var note1 = new TinyMusic.Note('G3 q');
var note2 = new TinyMusic.Note('E4 q');
var note3 = new TinyMusic.Note('C4 h');
// create a new sequence
var sequence = new TinyMusic.Sequence( ac, tempo );
// add the notes
sequence.push( note1, note2, note3 );
// disable looping
sequence.loop = false;
// play it
sequence.play();
To eliminate a bit of boilerplate, you can also pass an array of strings to the Sequence
constructor. Here's the last example, tweaked to take advantage of that:
// create a new Web Audio API context
var ac = new AudioContext();
// set the playback tempo (120 beats per minute)
var tempo = 120;
// create a new sequence
var sequence = new TinyMusic.Sequence( ac, tempo, [
'G3 q',
'E4 q',
'C4 h'
]);
// disable looping
sequence.loop = false;
// play it
sequence.play();
Documentation
Note
The Note
constructor only accepts one argument: a string that dictates note frequency and duration. An example input string might look like 'A4 q'
.
In that example, 'A4'
refers to the frequency 440Hz (more on that here), and 'q'
means "quarter note".
To create a rest, you can pass in any "note name" that's not valid. I usually use '-'
. So '- q'
would be a quarter note rest (or one beat of silence for you non-music-types).
The duration component of the string can follow a few different forms:
'w'
is a whole note'h'
is a half note'q'
is a quarter note'e'
is an eighth note's'
is a sixteenth note'es'
is a dotted eighth note (eighth plus sixteenth). This works for any combination of the letters above.'0.0125'
is a 32nd note, but any numeric value will work here. So'2'
would be a half note,'0.5'
would be an eighth note, etc.
After the constructor is run, Note
instances have two properties:
frequency
is a number representing the note's frequency in Hzduration
is the ratio of beat length (always 1) to the note's time value.1
would be a quarter note,0.5
a half note, etc.
Sequence
The Sequence
constructor accepts 3 arguments, but all are optional:
ac
is an AudioContext
instance. If not provided, one will be created -- but you really should provide one.
tempo
is a tempo in beats per minute. If not provided, a default tempo of 120 will be set.
arr
is an array of Note
instances or strings (like the ones passed to the Note
constructor).
The Sequence
class has a bunch of methods and properties, but only a few are really intended to be "public":
Sequence.loop
The loop
property is a boolean value that controls whether or not the sequence will play repeatedly. By default, its value is set to true
.
Sequence.smoothing
The smoothing
property controls portamento (smoothly sliding from one frequency to the next). The smoothing
value should be a number between 0
(no smoothing) to 1
(lots of smoothing). The default value is 0
.
Sequence.staccato
The staccato
property controls "choppiness". With a value of 0
, notes will play out for their entire duration. With a value of 1
, they'll be harshly truncated. By default, the staccato
value is 0
.
Sequence.gain
The gain
property is a Web Audio GainNode
.
There's too much to fully cover it here, but basically:
var sequence = new TinyMusic.Sequence();
// the double "gain" isn't a typo. the GainNode instance has a property
// called "gain", which has a "value" that you can set
sequence.gain.gain.value = 0.5; // half volume
Sequence.bass
The bass
property is a Web Audio BiquadFilterNode
.
If that sounds scary, just know this: it's basically just an EQ slider that controls low-end frequencies (centered around 100Hz by default)
var sequence = new TinyMusic.Sequence();
// give the sequence some sweet, sweet bass (positive values add bass, negative values reduce it)
sequence.bass.gain.value = 10;
Sequence.mid
Same as Sequence.bass
, but focuses on midrange frequencies (1000Hz by default)
Sequence.treble
Same as Sequence.bass
, but focuses on higher frequencies (2500Hz by default)
Sequence.waveType
The waveType
property defines what kind of oscillator the sequence will use. By default, oscillators use 'square'
waves because they sound totally fucking awesome. You can also use 'sine'
, 'sawtooth'
, or 'triangle'
.
Sequence.createCustomWave(real, imaginary)
Creates a custom waveType to use with Sequence.waveType = 'custom'
. This will create and set a periodicWaveForm on the sequencer's OscillatorNode. real
and imaginary
should both be Arrays (they will be converted to Float32Array) and they must be the same length, or the AudioContext will generate an error. If no value is supplied for imaginary
, real
will be duplicated.
var sequence = new TinyMusic.Sequence(ac, tempo, harmony);
sequence.play();
// An electric piano/organy (The Doors-ish) sound
sequence.createCustomWave([-0.8, 1, 0.8, 0.8, -0.8, -0.8, -1]);
// A soft, sine-like wave (a little grittier than plain "sine")
sequence.createCustomWave([-1,0,1,0,-1,0,1]);
// A bit grittier, sounds a little more like a horn
sequence.createCustomWave([-1,1,-1,1,-1,1],[1,0,1,0,1,0]);
// Trumpety
sequence.createCustomWave([-1,-0.9,-0.6,-0.3, 0, 0.3, 0.6, 0.9,1]);
Sequence.prototype.push()
The push()
method accepts any number of Note
instances (or "note strings" that can be passed to the Note
constructor) and adds them to the sequence.
Sequence.prototype.play()
The play()
method begins playback of your sequence. It optionally accepts a Web Audio timestamp to determine when playback should begin.
If no timestamp is supplied (or the timestamp is in the past) playback will begin immediately.
Sequence.prototype.stop()
The stop()
method stops all playback immediately.
Full example
Here's a more elaborate demo that shows how to play multiple sequences in sync, as well as use gain and EQ:
// create the audio context
var ac = new AudioContext(),
// get the current Web Audio timestamp (this is when playback should begin)
when = ac.currentTime,
// set the tempo
tempo = 132,
// initialize some vars
sequence1,
sequence2,
sequence3,
// create an array of "note strings" that can be passed to a sequence
lead = [
'- e',
'Bb3 e',
'A3 e',
'Bb3 e',
'G3 e',
'A3 e',
'F3 e',
'G3 e',
'E3 e',
'F3 e',
'G3 e',
'F3 e',
'E3 e',
'F3 e',
'D3 q',
'- e',
'Bb3 s',
'A3 s',
'Bb3 e',
'G3 e',
'A3 e',
'G3 e',
'F3 e',
'G3 e',
'E3 e',
'F3 e',
'G3 e',
'F3 e',
'E3 s',
'F3 s',
'E3 e',
'D3 q'
],
harmony = [
'- e',
'D4 e',
'C4 e',
'D4 e',
'Bb3 e',
'C4 e',
'A3 e',
'Bb3 e',
'G3 e',
'A3 e',
'Bb3 e',
'A3 e',
'G3 e',
'A3 e',
'F3 q',
'- e',
'D4 s',
'C4 s',
'D4 e',
'Bb3 e',
'C4 e',
'Bb3 e',
'A3 e',
'Bb3 e',
'G3 e',
'A3 e',
'Bb3 e',
'A3 e',
'G3 s',
'A3 s',
'G3 e',
'F3 q'
],
bass = [
'D3 q',
'- h',
'D3 q',
'A2 q',
'- h',
'A2 q',
'Bb2 q',
'- h',
'Bb2 q',
'F2 h',
'A2 h'
];
// create 3 new sequences (one for lead, one for harmony, one for bass)
sequence1 = new TinyMusic.Sequence( ac, tempo, lead );
sequence2 = new TinyMusic.Sequence( ac, tempo, harmony );
sequence3 = new TinyMusic.Sequence( ac, tempo, bass );
// set staccato and smoothing values for maximum coolness
sequence1.staccato = 0.55;
sequence2.staccato = 0.55;
sequence3.staccato = 0.05;
sequence3.smoothing = 0.4;
// adjust the levels so the bass and harmony aren't too loud
sequence1.gain.gain.value = 1.0;
sequence2.gain.gain.value = 0.8;
sequence3.gain.gain.value = 0.65;
// apply EQ settings
sequence1.mid.frequency.value = 800;
sequence1.mid.gain.value = 3;
sequence2.mid.frequency.value = 1200;
sequence3.mid.gain.value = 3;
sequence3.bass.gain.value = 6;
sequence3.bass.frequency.value = 80;
sequence3.mid.gain.value = -6;
sequence3.mid.frequency.value = 500;
sequence3.treble.gain.value = -2;
sequence3.treble.frequency.value = 1400;
//start the lead part immediately
sequence1.play( when );
// delay the harmony by 16 beats
sequence2.play( when + ( 60 / tempo ) * 16 );
// start the bass part immediately
sequence3.play( when );
Development
- Install Node.js
- Run
npm install
- Run
grunt
Voila!
I also have grunt watch
set up to automatically build when you change a source file.
Contributing
Go for it. I wrote this in an afternoon, it could probably be improved. Pull requests are completely welcome, but please make sure that the test suite passes and that you conform to the Idiomatic.js style guide.
Issues
File 'em. I'm happy to fix bugs or answer questions.
I'm probably not gonna look to add many more features though, since this is really intended to be a very small library (people are using it for js13k, so, I mean...).