DOS Daw?
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 530 posts since 1 May, 2011
I fired up dosbox to play some old shareware games lately and it made me wonder what might be some good old DOS audio programs to try and hunt down (for nostalgic purposes)?
Can you help me on this quest?
Can you help me on this quest?
miedex
- KVRAF
- 10532 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
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- KVRAF
- 6426 posts since 22 Jan, 2005 from Sweden
I don't think many DOS programs run in Windows NT/2k/XP/Vista/7.
In Vista/7 I wonder if it's a DOS box at all, just a command prompt console.
Anyway the hardware IO in Windows NT type of Windows are highly protected and you would need certain drivers to access hardware which is common from DOS programs.
I the 90's I found a driver that open up all hardware addresses in Dr Dobbs Journal. I used that for a TV-card at the time.
But Windows 95/98 did not have this kind of protection so DOS stuff ran just fine.
But I can't see any good reason to fiddle with that at all.
In Vista/7 I wonder if it's a DOS box at all, just a command prompt console.
Anyway the hardware IO in Windows NT type of Windows are highly protected and you would need certain drivers to access hardware which is common from DOS programs.
I the 90's I found a driver that open up all hardware addresses in Dr Dobbs Journal. I used that for a TV-card at the time.
But Windows 95/98 did not have this kind of protection so DOS stuff ran just fine.
But I can't see any good reason to fiddle with that at all.
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penguinfromdeep penguinfromdeep https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=193898
- KVRAF
- 1993 posts since 18 Nov, 2008
Lfm, Dosbox is a third party program that enables you to run old dos programs in Windows, it's not the default 'dos prompt' that comes with windows but kind of emulation. That said, there were some cool music programs for dos, like trackers (Scream Tracker, Fast Tracker) and even some softsynths later on like Audiosim and AXS (really cool, http://www.sonicspot.com/axs/axs.html) and some other that I can't now recall.. Damn I'm old
circuit modeling and 0-dfb filters are cool
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- KVRAF
- 2367 posts since 17 Apr, 2004
Try Impulse Tracker if you're into that kind of thing, it's just like Scream Tracker, but a lot better.
- KVRAF
- 10532 posts since 20 Nov, 2003 from Lost and Spaced
I love(d) AXS. It still runs on XP SP2 .
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- KVRist
- 116 posts since 1 Apr, 2007
Voyetra sequencer plus. Midi only so maybe not a true DAW
The more you learn - the less you understand
- KVRian
- 1384 posts since 12 Oct, 2012
Had to bump
Just downloaded Axs now, and it really is as good as i remembered
A whole DAW compiled to 350kbytes, with an above average sounding synth, that pretty fuc*ing impressive! It was ahead of it's time back than in 2001 and held great potential, pity the company didn't develop a vst version.
Just downloaded Axs now, and it really is as good as i remembered
A whole DAW compiled to 350kbytes, with an above average sounding synth, that pretty fuc*ing impressive! It was ahead of it's time back than in 2001 and held great potential, pity the company didn't develop a vst version.
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- KVRAF
- 15517 posts since 13 Oct, 2009
Yes, during the DOS era there were very few audio mangling programs and very few high quality soundcards to support them. Midi sequencing ruled the day and was excellent if you used an MPU401 to handle the midi timing. DAWs really came out after windows was introduced.Wittenberg wrote:Voyetra sequencer plus. Midi only so maybe not a true DAW
It's not freeware but cakewalk for DOS was available and included the CAL language.
I vaguely remember some proto-modular synth type toys as well, but I couldn't tell you the name for the life of me.
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- KVRer
- 6 posts since 23 Dec, 2012
For DOS era I remember trackers(especialy Impulse tracker)
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- KVRist
- 131 posts since 4 Jul, 2007 from Tilburg, Netherlands
I really used to use an old version of Cakewalk (later Sonar):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWGUrQsJ7_U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWGUrQsJ7_U
- KVRAF
- 6113 posts since 7 Jan, 2005 from Corporate States of America
I bought a bunch of classic computers to make a retro music studio. When I actually started trying to use them, what with the disks and lack of hard drives and pathway between downloading software from the web and getting it onto the retro machine... Bah. I think the most success I had with retro stuff was playing LucasArts games in SCUMMVM and DOSboxed Sierra games with a real MT-32 connected for music. I ran out of disposable income before I managed to secure interfaces between modern storage devices and classic machines with various non-standard I/O.
Retro is fun to think about but actually going back to the reality of the technology has been very revealing to me about how things have improved. But then, things have also UN-improved: bugs, complexity, load time, boot time...
If you want to relive the fun of Fast Tracker, just run Milky Tracker. Heck, run Apple IIgs, C64, Amiga and Atari ST emulators, for that matter. I should have!!
Retro is fun to think about but actually going back to the reality of the technology has been very revealing to me about how things have improved. But then, things have also UN-improved: bugs, complexity, load time, boot time...
If you want to relive the fun of Fast Tracker, just run Milky Tracker. Heck, run Apple IIgs, C64, Amiga and Atari ST emulators, for that matter. I should have!!
- dysamoria.com
my music @ SoundCloud
my music @ SoundCloud
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- Pick Me Pick me!
- 9684 posts since 12 Mar, 2002 from a state of confusion
my fav DOS music player: http://www.cubic.org/player/download.html
- something special
- 8571 posts since 16 Mar, 2002 from Birmingham, Alabama
That was my first sequencer circa 1987. I paid over $200 just to get the ram on my computer upgraded from 16k to 32k so I could run the damn thing!Wittenberg wrote:Voyetra sequencer plus. Midi only so maybe not a true DAW
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- Pick Me Pick me!
- 9684 posts since 12 Mar, 2002 from a state of confusion
bluedad wrote:That was my first sequencer circa 1987. I paid over $200 just to get the ram on my computer upgraded from 16k to 32k so I could run the damn thing!Wittenberg wrote:Voyetra sequencer plus. Midi only so maybe not a true DAW
The freebie calculators they give out at the bank have more memory than that!