T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2799.1 | KCS and Music-X | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Sat Aug 05 1989 10:26 | 4 |
| Dr. T's KCS, version 1.6a, supports Amiga internal sounds, and has some
special support for drum tracks. Music-X also supports Amiga internal
sounds, but I haven't had any experience with it (yet!).
John Sauter
|
2799.2 | For Drums Only | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Sat Aug 05 1989 13:03 | 5 |
| Re: .0
There is a program named "Dynamic Drums" that turns the Amiga into
a drum machine. It uses the internal voices or midi. But drums
is all it does.
|
2799.3 | | GUCCI::HERB | | Sun Aug 06 1989 23:46 | 4 |
| I know ,I have Dynamic drums too.Great program!
matt
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2799.4 | Veni Vidi Midi | MINDER::TURNERI | | Tue Aug 08 1989 09:45 | 4 |
|
It only sends the clock pulse thro the MIDI, nothing else though.
Ian T.
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2799.5 | Cold Hearted Ami? | HPSCAD::DMCARR | Asleep at the mouse | Sun Aug 20 1989 23:21 | 6 |
| A little off the beaten path, but is that an Amiga 500 featured at
the start of the Paula Abdul video "Cold Hearted"? If so, its
"very nice" :-)
-Dom
(Can anybody identify which music program they're running?)
|
2799.6 | AMIGA MUSIC + RELEASES | VANISH::SHANLEY | | Wed Aug 23 1989 16:11 | 22 |
| MUSIC GALORE
Just a short note to everyone concerned with Amiga music. My name is
Matt and I am a new member to the company. Have you guys ever heard of
a music program called Soundtracker.....? If the answer is no then I
will give you a brief outline of what it does.
The program is on eight disks and it takes FULL advantage of Paula,
the program comes with around 120 songs, 400 - 500 samples and much
much more...........
P.S. I have a friend who runs a shop in the South of England, so if
anyone wants any information on forthcoming releases, just mail me
and I will let you know......
Matt
P.P.S If there are any other problems with the AMIGA side of things
just let me know.
|
2799.7 | I want more information about soundtracker | GUCCI::HERB | | Mon Aug 28 1989 23:12 | 9 |
| Wow! Finally another music program that uses besides sonix and DMCS...I
love to to make music with the internal sounds!!
about that paula abduul video...I have seen it hundreds of times
cause I have MTV..I always thought it was a ST...I will pay closer
attention next time
matt
|
2799.8 | PHONE | VANISH::SHANLEY | | Wed Nov 08 1989 07:54 | 4 |
| Matt,
Call me on 7774 6220 and we'll have a chat about soundtracker o.k.
|
2799.9 | More info on soundtracker | AMIGA::RIES | DAM: Mothers Against Dyslexia | Wed Nov 08 1989 14:13 | 8 |
| Many of the really nice amiga demos that I have seen from Europe (Wildcopper
etc) have had really nice sounding soundtracks. In poking around in some of
the binary files, I have seen reference to SOUNDTRACKER. Is Soundtracker
something that is only available in Europe? Can we get some more discussion
of it here in this note?
Thanks,
Frank
|
2799.10 | i want soundtracker! | GUCCI::HERB | | Fri Nov 10 1989 22:01 | 9 |
| I create metal music in my band I play guitar and I use dynamic
drums for drums we dont have much of a good bass player so what
would be nice is if soundtrack would be as easy to have drums as
dynamic drums.. Atleast esier then sonix. And have a bass instrument
for the bass line. It is to hard with sonix to make really good
drum parts.
matt
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2799.11 | I'm still here | VANISH::SHANLEY | | Wed Dec 20 1989 09:48 | 12 |
| Hello it's Matt again.......
Just a quick note to say that I am still around. If you want to know
more about Soundtracker please ring me. In order to tell you about the
whole of the program in notes would take me a couple of hours, so as I
have said call me and I'll tell you about the program over the phone.
Matt.
Dec Vans. Newbury. England.
Tel: 7774 6220
|
2799.12 | Basic DMCS questions | DECWET::DAVIS | Strength through Peace | Wed Apr 03 1991 16:05 | 10 |
| I am experimenting with AmigaVision and am wondering if I should buy
DMCS but could not find an in-depth review of the program.
I have a couple of questions... How do you enter your music
data into the program? Do you use a midi keyboard, script, or some other
method? How about instrument creation? What type of editing can you
do with the music entered. Do you have to know music theory(i.e. do
you have to be able to read)in order to use the program? How about
MIDI support? Thanks in advance.
Mark
|
2799.13 | Here's some words, anyway... | TLE::ALIVE::ASHFORTH | The Lord is my light | Wed Apr 03 1991 16:26 | 36 |
| Re .12:
I'm right in the middle of selling my own copy of DMCS, but that may or may not
be relevant to your situation.
The basis of DMCS is "classical notation," in other words staves, notes, and so
forth. You can "hand-copy" a score without having any idea what it means, and
then play it back. DMCS does accept MIDI input and send MIDI output, but that's
not it's forte (pun intended), and even the docs recommend you use a sequencer
for this purpose if you're serious.
I found the note-by-note entry tedious at best. Once a score is entered, editing
it is fairly intuitive (graphic based: select notes, select operation), but
getting all the notes in there in the first place is a drag without a MIDI
keyboard and sequencer. I used Soundscape as a sequencer and transferred the
files into DMCS through SMUS format, which can be read and written by both
programs.
DMCS comes with a fair number of IFF-format instruments, but does not give you
the ability to create new ones. The best program for that purpose, IMHO, is
Synthia II, which lets you create instruments from scratch using virtually all
currently available synthesis techniques. There are also a number of sound
digitizers available, with sound-editing packages provided, as well as a number
of standalone sound editors you can use with any digitized sound sample.
All that said, look at your goals. DMCS is a good choice if you want to learn
classical notation and don't want to go for a big-bucks sequencer which supports
classical notation. If what you want is to compose songs without knowing
music theory and/or notation, however, I'd recommend going with an "entry-level"
sequencer like Tiger Cub or somesuch.
Sounds like you're in for a lot of fun, any which way.
Cheers,
Bob
|
2799.14 | It's worth while... | GOBAMA::WILSONTL | Lead Trumpet (Read that...LEED!) | Wed Apr 03 1991 16:33 | 29 |
| DMCS was the first program I bought with my A500. So far, I've used it
to enter notes. You do it by mouse and click the notes into place.
DMCS provides a couple of ways to enter the notes, even by mouse: you
can click the note directly on the staff or click a piano keyboard and
it will place them for you. Both methods are useful in certain cases.
I know that DMCS can take notes from a MIDI input, but haven't pursued
this very far. (The only results I got was that DMCS placed a note at
every quarter note position for each note I entered.)
DMCS comes with a number of instruments. I'm not familiar with IFF
sounds (or whatever's available) so I can't say much about the
mechanisms of creating your own. I'm sure that you can, somehow. I
have Audiomaster II and if I ever get a digitizer, I might be able to
do it that way.
A full range of editing is possible at any time (cut, paste, etc.) and
you can create symbols to superimpose on the music. This is done by
addition of two font sets and I've edited the fonts myself to provide
additional symbols and improve the ones that came with it.
Knowing music theory helps you to write, not to use the program. You
can still have a lot of fun with it because you can hear what is being
entered.
It can export SMUS files which can be read by Dr. T's stuff (Copyist,
etc.)
Tony (using it to arrange big band stuff)
|
2799.15 | SMUS | VICE::JANZEN | Tom 223-5140 MLO23-4/E10 | Wed Apr 03 1991 17:39 | 10 |
| Dr. T's KCS 3.0 cannot read SMUS as far as I can tell.
Dr. T's Copyist can, however. Tiger Cub might be able to read SMUS.
Bars and Pipes can read SMUS with an optional option.
I used DMCS to enter large amounts of my own complex concert music.
It was faster than entering notes into KCS via keyboard.
It is probably faster than playing in from a keyboard and fixing
everything to be exact to a millisecond, which is what I'm doing now.
Bars and Pipes is the most up-and-coming sequencer for the Amiga.
Maybe I will get it.
Tom
|
2799.16 | Sequencer to Write SMUS? | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Wed Apr 03 1991 18:00 | 10 |
| Everyone has mentioned products which will 'read' SMUS files, but what
about writing SMUS. Since AmigaVision and the Director and about all
of the programs which playback musci and graphics together only use
SMUS files, which program other than DMCS and SONIX can create SMUS
files to use with these programs? Can Bars and Pipes also create SMUS
or just read them. I see that Soundscape can, but I was thinking more
in the line of products that were alive and well and improving?
Terry
|
2799.17 | Maybe SMUS. | STAR::ROBINSON | | Wed Apr 03 1991 18:36 | 14 |
|
I am almost sure Bars & Pipes can convert to SMUS with an optional
add on tool package. I forgot which one - Music Box B, Multimedia kit or
internal sounds package. The multimedia package is hyped as tools
designed to use with standard Amiga presentation software and includes
a midi recorder and player program among other things. I don't have it,
or all of the details.
BTW, the new B&P pro version has integrated scoring. I'm waiting for my
upgrade now... BTW2, the old Bars & Pipes is supposed to be discounted
now that the pro version is out. The optional packages should work with
either though.
Dave
|
2799.18 | SMUS vs. SMF | TLE::ALIVE::ASHFORTH | The Lord is my light | Thu Apr 04 1991 10:01 | 8 |
| Y'know, my personal take on SMUS is that it will gradually lose importance as
more programs recognize SMF (Standard MIDI File) format. I can't recall if
AmigaVision plays SMF files yet; since I can't generate any as of yet, I haven't
really paid much attention to that so far. As more and more "marketeers" hop on
the multimedia bandwagon, though, I think we're going to see SMF files by the
bazillions, and not too many SMUS files.
Bob
|
2799.19 | Thanks for the info;DMCS wanted | DECWET::DAVIS | Strength through Peace | Thu Apr 04 1991 12:39 | 11 |
| Thanks for the info on DMCS. I have Music-X so I hope to convert
scores back and forth between "X" and DMCS. AmigaVison's midi support
is not great, and I have heard that it will handle SMUS better than
midi thus the inquiry into DMCS.
Bob, you want to sell me your copy of DMCS? E-mail me if you are
interested.
Mark
p.s. AmigaVision only handles 4 midi channels(!?????)
|
2799.20 | I wish SMUS could die! | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Thu Apr 04 1991 16:41 | 28 |
| re .18
> As more and more "marketeers" hop on the multimedia bandwagon,
> though, I think we're going to see SMF files by the bazillions,
> and not too many SMUS files.
I was talking to Keith Doyle about SMF support in the future for The
Director and he wasn't sure how feasible it was, saying that there was
a lot of information to process and a lot of things to do to play a
Standard Midi File. He wasn't sure there was enough horsepower left
over in the Amiga to drive the graphics, etc.
I've noticed that when playing a sequence in Dr. Ts KCS that almost
anything else I try to do makes a noticable effect in the timing of the
song. Maybe I just need a faster CPU since I only have a 68010 (CMI).
Gold Disk's showmaker is support to play SMF, but who knows if that
will ever hit the streets. I'll like to see a demo of the Bars and
Pipes multimedia kit capability and see if they have taken enough
overhead out from a full blow sequencer like Dr. Ts to be able to play
a SMF and do an animation at the same time.
I agree that SMUS should die, then even in DMCS, when you save out to
SMUS format you loose a lot of what you spent a heck of a long time
putting in.
Terry
|
2799.21 | SMF is a bigger bucket... | TLE::ALIVE::ASHFORTH | The Lord is my light | Thu Apr 04 1991 17:10 | 20 |
| Re .19:
I think you're right about required power for multimedia; my guess would be that
intelligent preloading to the max internal memory capabilities would be key for
slick audio/animation combos.
One good piece of news is that SMF is pretty full-featured compared to SMUS.
F'rinstance, time isn't limited to "classical" intervals, but is typically at
least 96 PPQN (parts per quarter note) resolution these days. Also, SMF files
can contain lyrics, copyright notices, introductory text, instrument names for
each channel (dynamically redefinable, if I remember right), and prolly lots
more goodies which don't happen to occur to me just now.
Of course, most software out there doesn't *support* all these hooks just yet,
and when/if they do, multimedia programs had darned well better get rid of most
of it before the timing crunch starts! Ah, well, life will be *so* much easier
for us software types when the silicon boys give us megamips to play with!
Cheers,
Bob
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