I graduated this weekend.
Not in music this time—but in Computer Science. That makes two degrees, one life reboot, and a whole lot of Ctrl+Z.
Now I’ve built something that blends what I know and what I’ve learned. It’s called ToneGPT.
I made it for musicians like me—specifically for folks using the Fractal FM9 who’ve ever gotten lost in tone menus at 2 a.m.
🎧 What It Does:
- Translates words into tones, ideas into chains
- Finds the right tools for the sound in your head
- Simplifies the process without dumbing it down
💬 If You Code (or Want To):
This thing’s still early. It works, but there’s a long list of features I haven’t touched yet—preset saving, smarter routing, maybe even a place to share tones like demos. It’s the kind of project that’ll grow if the right people get curious.
If you’re into code, music tech, or just like breaking stuff to see how it works—check it out. Fork it. Suggest something wild. Or tell me what feels off. I built it to learn, but I’m building it to share.
⚡ Why It Matters
I didn’t expect to be the guy writing code on graduation day—but here we are. And honestly, it feels right. Music, tech, late-night rabbit holes... this is where it all overlaps.
Both degrees, all the resets, every long night—it brought me here. I’m still learning, still building, still curious. ToneGPT is just one piece of something bigger, but it’s the first thing I’ve made that really feels like me.
—Ben
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