Home » GEAR: Music Software News, NEWS: Industry Headlines

Symbolic Sound Releases Software for Chaining Together Two or More Paca(rana) Sound Computers Under Control of Kyma

by Jesse JJ Jame
published Sun, 30 Aug 2009 – 17:50:29 -0700 PDT
No Comment
Email this Page Share this Page Feedback

CHAMPAIGN Ill. /Music Industry Newswire/ — Symbolic Sound Corporation has expanded the real-time sound-computing power of its Paca(rana) sound engine by making it possible for Kyma sound designers to chain two or more multiprocessor Paca(rana)s together via the built-in A/B Expansion ports. To the Kyma software, a network of Paca(rana)s appears as a single sound computation engine with multiple processors. Kyma automatically detects the number of available processors and schedules the execution of DSP-intensive signal processing and synthesis algorithms across multiple processors.

3 Pacaranas“One of the most frequently asked questions we were asked when we announced the new Paca and Pacarana sound engines back in January was ‘Is it expandable?’” recalls Symbolic Sound president Carla Scaletti. “Now we can answer with an unequivocal, YES!” She adds that, “…while not everyone needs that much sound computing power, it’s nice to know it’s available should you ever need it, even if only on a temporary basis.”

How it works
Two or more Pacas, Pacaranas, or combinations of both can be connected by plugging the orange cables, provided by Symbolic Sound, into the Expansion A and B ports on the backs of the units. A combination of audio and control signals is transmitted over the orange wires from each Paca(rana) to its neighbor. One of the Paca(rana)s is connected to a Macintosh or Windows computer (running the Kyma sound design software) via FireWire 800 (or 400). A single FireWire audio interface on the same bus handles all of the analog and digital audio inputs and outputs and, depending on the audio interface, MIDI. (A list of compatible converters can be found here: www.symbolicsound.com/Learn/SupportedConverters). The composite super-Pacarana shows up in Kyma as a single sound computation engine with extra processors. To the sound designer or musician, the expansion is completely transparent; Kyma automatically takes advantage of the additional real-time processing power and memory.

Video
Link to a hand-held video with a Kyma-synthesized sound track showing the connection of 3 Pacas and 3 Pacaranas to create an 18-processor sound computer:

ssc-media.com/Movies/Wormhole.mov

Who can use it
Anyone, from large sound design studios (which may set up a rack of Pacaranas as an audio compute-farm for intensive sound modelling operations) to friends getting together and temporarily hooking their Pacas together for some sound tweaking fun, can enjoy the benefits of the newly enabled expansion ports and orange connector cables. Audio engineers or sound designers managing complex signal processing and sound design requirements for live shows or theatre productions can assemble a rack of Pacaranas, all controlled and sequenced from a single computer. Supercomputing centers can offer scalable real-time sound computation and data sonification as an adjunct to the computer graphics rendering and dynamic simulation modelling already being offered to researchers and artists. Game design studios can set up a sound-design rendering farm for creating special sound effects for cinematics and voice processing for game characters. Anyone who ever finds themselves running out of real-time sound computation power could benefit from this new technology.

Early adopters
(Photos of 3-Pacarana Rack in Tobias Enhus’ Studio (Photo Credit: Tobias Enhus): www.symbolicsound.com/cgi-bin/bin/view/Company/PacaranaExpansionImages#Photos_from_Tobias_Enhus_Studio)

Beta testers for the new technology include Hollywood film composer Tobias Enhus (www.symbolicsound.com/cgi-bin/bin/view/Community/WebHome#EnhusStudioOfTheMonth), who has already been using his rack of three interconnected Pacaranas to generate disturbingly bizarre sound tracks for Alan Rifkin’s upcoming Showtime series Look, and organist/composer Franz Danksagmüller (de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Danksagmüller) who recently used his 2-Pacarana system to accurately simulate the sounds of a cathedral organ on a portable keyboard to accompany a showing of Fritz Lang’s silent film masterpiece Metropolis at the Göteborg International Film Festival.

Pricing & Availability
The Paca, Pacarana, and “orange wires” for connecting two or more of them together are now available at the Symbolic Sound Store (www.symbolicsound.com). Current multiple-Paca(rana) owners can request a free set of cables from Symbolic Sound. Every Paca or Pacarana comes with Symbolic Sound’s innovative Kyma X environment featuring its unique set of sound synthesis and processing algorithms and a powerful way to easily re-combine these algorithms to create sounds that have never been heard before.

SPHERE: Related Content — CLICK HERE to See What Else is Out There!

About The Author / Editor:


JJ Jame is a percussionist and theremin player, formerly a member of the Redondo Beach based BoyRacer.com™ electronica band, and a long-time electronic music fan, formerly an editor for the defunct EMcult™ website.

  delicious:Symbolic Sound Releases Software for Chaining Together Two or More Paca(rana) Sound Computers Under Control of Kyma digg:Symbolic Sound Releases Software for Chaining Together Two or More Paca(rana) Sound Computers Under Control of Kyma newsvine:Symbolic Sound Releases Software for Chaining Together Two or More Paca(rana) Sound Computers Under Control of Kyma furl:Symbolic Sound Releases Software for Chaining Together Two or More Paca(rana) Sound Computers Under Control of Kyma reddit:Symbolic Sound Releases Software for Chaining Together Two or More Paca(rana) Sound Computers Under Control of Kyma Y!:Symbolic Sound Releases Software for Chaining Together Two or More Paca(rana) Sound Computers Under Control of Kyma  Add to Mixx! 
Permalink:   http://musicindustrynewswire.com/2009/08/30/min2098_175029.php

Related Stories:


Pacarana for Kyma Sound Design Environment
Open Sound Control for Kyma: Bidirectional communication between Kyma, iPad, Lemur, and other OSC-enabled devices
Haken Audio announces Continuum Fingerboard Firmware Version 4
Native Instruments Releases KORE 2.1 with MIDI Control Mode
Alesis USB-MIDI Cable: Problem-Solver Is An Ideal Addition to Any Electronic Musician’s Gig Bag
ASK Video Ships Pro Tools 8 Level 3 Tutorial DVD

Rings With Side Stones


Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam. All comments are moderated and self-promotional posts will never be visible.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.