npm install react-music
The easiest way to get started is to clone this repo and run npm start
. The demo song will be running at http://localhost:3000. You can open up the /demo/index.js
file and edit your song there, using the API below as reference.
That said, you can import the primitives yourself and run your own build setup if you want.
The first thing you want to do is create a Song
component. This is the controller for your entire beat. It takes a tempo
prop where you specify a BPM, and an autoplay
prop that configures whether the song should play right away, or wait to press the play button. Set up it like so:
<Song tempo={90}>
</Song>
Your Sequencer
's are what you use to define a looping section. They take two props. The first resolution
is the resolution of steps in your sequence array. This defaults to 16
, which is a sixteenth note. The second is bars
which is how many bars the sequencer sequences before it loops. You can have multiple sequencers in your song, and the main Song loop is based upon the sequencer with the largest number of bars. Here is an example:
<Song tempo={90}>
<Sequencer resolution={16} bars={1}>
</Sequencer>
</Song>
Once you have a Song
and a Sequencer
component, you can add instruments to your Sequencer
. Lets take a look at how these work:
The sampler component is used to play audio samples. To use it, you must at very least provide two props, sample
and steps
.sample
is a path to an audio file, and steps
is an array of indexes that map to the steps available based upon the resolution
and bars
props of your sequencer. So if you wanted a 4/4 kick line, you would do this:
<Song tempo={90}>
<Sequencer resolution={16} bars={1}>
<Sampler
sample="/samples/kick.wav"
steps={[0, 4, 8, 12]}
/>
</Sequencer>
</Song>
You can also provide an array for a step, where the second value is a tuning, from -12 to 12.
The Synth
component is used to create an oscillator and play it on steps, just like the Sampler
does. To use it, you must provide two props, type
and steps
. Valid types are sine
, square
, triangle
and sawtooth
. The Synth
component also takes an envelope
prop, where you can specify your ASDR settings. The shape of the step
prop is a bit different for the Synth
component, as you must specify an array in the format of [ step, duration, note || [notes] ]
. The duration
portion specifies duration in steps. The note
portion is a string of a musical note and octave like "a4" or "c#1", and for chords, can be an array of the same notes. This would look like:
<Song tempo={90}>
<Sequencer resolution={16} bars={1}>
<Synth
type="square"
steps={[
[0, 2, "c3"],
[8, 2, ["c3", "d#3", "f4"]]
]}
/>
</Sequencer>
</Song>
The Monosynth
component is a Synth
component, but it only plays one note at a time. It also has a glide
prop that specifies portamento length. So if two notes overlap, the monosynth glides up to the next value on that duration. Check out how:
<Song tempo={90}>
<Sequencer resolution={16} bars={1}>
<Monosynth
glide={0.5}
type="square"
steps={[
[0, 5, "c3"],
[4, 4, "c4"],
]}
/>
</Sequencer>
</Song>
There are a ton of new effects added in 1.0.0. You can compose effect chains by wrapping effects around your instruments. Here is an example of how you would do that:
<Song tempo={90}>
<Sequencer resolution={16} bars={1}>
<Reverb>
<Delay>
<Monosynth
steps={[
[0, 4, "c3"],
[4, 4, "c4"],
]}
/>
</Delay>
</Reverb>
</Sequencer>
</Song>
If you want to define an effects bus, which is a set of effects that multiple instruments can send their output to, this is achieved with the Bus
component.
First you want to create a Bus
component, and give it an identifier:
<Song tempo={90}>
<Bus id="myBus"/>
</Song>
Next, wrap your bus with the effect chain you want to make available, similarly to the way you would wrap effects around an instrument. You generally want to do this with effects that have wet/dry control, and set the dryLevel
to 0:
<Song tempo={90}>
<Delay dryLevel={0}>
<Bus id="myBus"/>
</Delay>
</Song>
Finally, to hook an instrument up to your bus, or several busses, add their id's to the busses
prop on an instrument:
<Song tempo={90}>
<Delay dryLevel={0}>
<Bus id="myBus"/>
</Delay>
<Sampler
busses={['myBus']}
sample='/samples/kick.wav'
steps={[1,4,8,12]}
/>
</Song>
You know whats bananas? LFO. Thats what. You can use an oscillator to modify properties of your instruments and effects. This is done with the LFO
component. Any node that you want to apply LFO to just needs it added as a child. Then you define a connect
prop that returns a function that lets you select a parent AudioNode property to oscillate. See the following example.
<Song tempo={90}>
<Synth
type="square"
steps={[
[0, 2, "c3"],
[8, 2, ["c3", "d#3", "f4"]]
]}
>
<LFO
type="sine"
frequency={0.05}
connect={(c) => c.gain}
/>
</Synth>
</Song>
autoplay (boolean) : Whether the song should start playing automatically
tempo (number) : Your song tempo
--
bars (number) : Number of bars in your sequence
resolution (number) : Step resolution for your sequence
busses (array) : An array of Bus
id strings to send output to
envelope (object) : An object specifying envelope settings
envelope={{
attack: 0.1,
sustain: 0.3,
decay: 20,
release: 0.5
}}
gain (number) : A number specifying instrument gain
glide (number) : Portamento length for overlapping notes
steps (array) : Array of step arrays for the notes to be played at
steps={[
[0, 2, "a2"]
]}
transpose (number) : Positive or negative number for transposition of notes
type (string) : Oscillator type. Accepts square
, triangle
, sawtooth
& sine
--
busses (array) : An array of Bus
id strings to send output to
detune (number) : A number (in cents) specifying instrument detune
gain (number) : A number specifying instrument gain
sample (number) : Step resolution for your sequence
steps (array) : Array of step indexes for the sample to be played at. Accepts arrays for steps in order to provide a second argument for index based detune (in between -12 & 12).
--
busses (array) : An array of Bus
id strings to send output to
envelope (object) : An object specifying envelope settings
envelope={{
attack: 0.1,
sustain: 0.3,
decay: 20,
release: 0.5
}}
gain (number) : A number specifying instrument gain
steps (array) : Array of step arrays for the notes to be played at. Accepts in array in the [ step, duration, note || [notes] ]
format.
// single note
steps={[
[0, 2, "a2"]
]}
// chord
steps={[
[0, 2, ["c2", "e2", "g2"]]
]}
transpose (number) : Positive or negative number for transposition of notes
type (string) : Oscillator type. Accepts square
, triangle
, sawtooth
& sine
bits (number)
bufferSize (number)
normfreq (number)
--
bypass (number)
delay (number)
feedback (number)
rate (number)
--
attack (number)
knee (number)
ratio (number)
release (number)
threshold (number)
--
bypass (number)
cutoff (number)
delayTime (number)
dryLevel (number)
feedback (number)
wetLevel (number)
--
Q (number)
frequency (number)
gain (number)
type (string)
--
amount (number)
--
bufferSize (number)
cutoff (number)
resonance (number)
--
algorithmIndex (number)
bypass (number)
curveAmount (number)
drive (number)
outputGain (number)
--
delayTimeLeft (number)
delayTimeRight (number)
feedback (number)
wetLevel (number)
--
bypass (number)
dryLevel (number)
highCut (number)
impulse (string)
level (number)
lowCut (number)
wetLevel (number)
fftSize (number) : FFT Size value
onAudioProcess (function) : Callback function with audio processing data
smoothingTimeConstant (number) : Smoothing time constant
--
gain (number) : A number specifying Bus gain
id (string) : Bus ID
--
connect (function) : LFO property selection function
frequency (number) : LFO frequency
gain (number) : A number specifying LFO gain
type (string) : Oscillator type. Accepts square
, triangle
, sawtooth
& sine
- Currently only the 4/4 time signature is supported
Synth
presets need to be added- Record/Ouput audio file
- Optional working mixing board alongside viz
- Sampler sample maps