When did you begin making computer music?

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I am a part of a producer tripple called Giana-Brotherz www.giana-blrotherz.com and we started making music with no machines. I started playing the bass guitar in 1991 and my first computer was an Atari 800XL in the end of the 80'S. Close after this Atari I got a Commodore C64 where I heard the first time about Chris Huelsbeck because I played games he made the music for. I met Chicken the 2nd guy in the tripple. He played the drums in a hardcore band and he ask me if I like to play in their band. I agreed and since then we make music together. The 3rd guy is DJ Hookah. Chicken and me met him later. He started making music as he was a young child with a piano and he was really talented but sometimes he stopped playing the piano and went into DJ business. ;-)

It was still 1991 when Chicken and me made some songs with trackers. First it was the SoundTracker on an Amiga500 and it sounded just experimental or funny what we made but then we used the StarTracker or Protracker for better results. Later as we got more MIDI-instruments and an Amiga2000 we used the OctaMed-Tracker.

I remember one party in the earlier days of our electronic music experiences where we played live with 6 Amigas just with the small 8 bit sample-box and we started a few of them by hand to get them in sync. LOL

Our first Sampler was a Hohner with 2 mb of RAM and we only could use floppies. The worst thing was that if you made a full disk dump and there was one read/write error on the disk the sampler automatically erases all samples in the memory and I remember one live act where this happend and the whole drums of the track were lost while we played.
It also took minutes till the samples were dumped in.

Nowadays it's a pleasure with all these excellent audio soft and hardware but I wouldn't miss the basics I learnt in these days. On the PC I sometimes make music with ReNoise due to nostalgic reasons. It is similar to the good old trackers. :-)

By the way the release "nachbeben" on Pathfinder 04 was still programmed with the Amiga 2000 and OctaMed.
Last edited by SOLA on Wed Feb 02, 2005 1:20 am, edited 5 times in total.

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pHz wrote:sort your sig out germ ...

http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=44705

... thanks

slainte :| rob
Ooops!. Got it. Sorry about that!
The Germinator

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I used to wiz in programming the ZX32 in the early eighties although it wasn't really music based programs; I was more a game-head back then. Atlhough I did make library programs for record collections. The early/mid nineties my fathers PC had a SB which I used to occupy for hours and hours and even got a song out of it that Mr. Fingers thought sounded quite good :oops: Still this was all just fooling around; A friend had an atari with cubase back then where I have spent quite a few nights playing on. Then for about half a year together with a roommate we had a small studio with an atari, a cs1x and a A3000. It got quiet a few years then untill the summer of 2003 I had finally saved up for a studio of my own; ever since I discovered kvr and I became a hw/sw junk.

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Let me cast my mind back....

Had a ZX Spectrum and did some very basic (ha!) stuff with that (in the days when computer magazines contained listings for you to type in - you tell that to the youth of today and they'll not believe you :) )

Couldn't afford a Yamaha CX5 so I bought a cheap Toshiba MSX computer, some cartridge thing (can't remeber the name) and etched a board to connect the two

Got an Atari ST, Yamaha DX7 and Tascam Porta-One. Heard a demo of the Roland MT-32 in my local guitar shop and bought it on the spot. I can't remember the name of the sequencer I used but it had a great feature where you created clips which sat in a window from where you could drag and drop them onto tracks rather than using the Pro 24 track-style approach

Years went by, wife and three children arrived, bought a PC (433Mhz Celeron - still using it!) with an SW1000XG, SB Live and Fruity Loops v2.something.

Discovered VST's and Acid v2 (then v3 - don't see the point of v4 or v5). Got the part-time use of a more powerful PC. Got Tracktion. Got Komplete 2. Got EnergyXT. Got no free time :(

Regards,

Derek.
Less than 1000 posts and writer's block has set in :-(

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Around 1992-1993. ProTracker at a friends place. WhackerTracker/FastTracker1 at home. Then FastTracker II at home. Then got my jd800. Now I'm not using my jd any longer, but I won't sell it! :)

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:) I started to release music in 1990 with hardware synths, 1998 I released the first only computer-track. but I still got and buy hardware.

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my first venture into music making started in 2000 with a Roland MC-505. Heavily influenced by trance music at the time, i bought this box simply coz it looked cool, and it looked (and) was expensive enough for me to think this was the only thing i'll ever need. Sure enough after 6 months of using the thing i outgrew it, and sunk into depression after running into too many limitations. I mean... 8 track sequencer?? what a joke. no sampling, no banks or new sounds to play with, nothing, the whole box sounded extremely outdated by 2000's standards. Then a friend of mine gave me a copy of propellerheads' rebirth. well i've never looked back... o bought a copy of reason, then ran into limitations again... then after searching on the net i discovered fruityloops. Initially i hated fruityloops simply coz of the name... i couldnt get my head around how a software with suck a goofy name could possibly be used for professional productions.

I've been using fruityloops since 2002 and now i'm not interested in anything else. Over the years i've struggled and learnt a lot and now fruity is as natural to me as walking. Over the years i've become a better musician as well.. and last year i got signed to a label and got some releases. Bring on the future! I love softsynths and i love soft sequencers. Unlike most other people.. i'm perfectly happy in a completely empty room with no knobs or hardware except for a computer! I'm just thankful for living in a time whn this is all possible...

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:smack: sory mark :hihi: but I hope that you agree: some knobs in a studio are very useful...
Unless for the mastering or premastering of your music its still the only thing... :wink:

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1987. Now I haven't got much further but at least I use eXT... :D

/SparkySpark
Thu Oct 01, 2020 1:15 pm Passing Bye wrote:
"look at SparkySpark's post 4 posts up, let that sink in for a moment"
Go MuLab!

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I started learning the music making in 1990 (or so) after I had heard some Soundtracker modules on my friends Amiga 500. The first song I heard - and immediately fell in love with - was called Blueberry but I can't remember the composer anymore. I used Soundtracker, Noisetracker, Protracker, Startrekker and finally when I got my first PC in 1995 I began to use Fasttracker 2. It simply rocked! :love: So far I've not felt as much "at home" with no software or hardware as i did with FT2... :roll:

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elwood wrote:I started learning the music making in 1990 (or so) after I had heard some Soundtracker modules on my friends Amiga 500. The first song I heard - and immediately fell in love with - was called Blueberry but I can't remember the composer anymore. I used Soundtracker, Noisetracker, Protracker, Startrekker and finally when I got my first PC in 1995 I began to use Fasttracker 2. It simply rocked! :love: So far I've not felt as much "at home" with no software or hardware as i did with FT2... :roll:
Same for me. I remember this one time when a couple of friends phoned me in the middle of the night, waking me up and going "Hey Stefan! We need a tune by the morning!" and I was like "uhm. Ok. Hold on. I'll be on irc in a moment".
40 minutes later I went back to bed, unfortunately that was probably the best tune I ever made.
You can hear it here if you like, it's called "Fjant 2":
http://www.back2roots.org/Music/Files/Steffo%2C1/

Most players play it back quite ugly, I've found "xmplay" to be the most accurate.

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I use eXT now. The rest is History.

--HansM
Last edited by M'Snah on Mon Mar 07, 2005 6:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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knobs in a studio come in handy? am i the only one in the world who isnt nuts about knobs? even though i started out on equipment with knobs (and i loved tweaking them) i dont miss them much. I have a midi controller now, with lots of knobs, but frankly i'd rather tweak with the mouse. Often i'm too lazy to program which knob should tweak what parameter. It's way faster with a mouse. also.. these days i concentrate on PRODUCTIVITY and not tweaking. If i tweak and tweak ans tweak for hours i wont achieve nothing. I may stumble upon awesome sounds, but i tweak them till i get sick of them then end up NOT using them. This is incredibly unproductive. Usually the only time i use the hardware knobs is when i'm testing out new softsynths.. I never was, and never will be a 'live' kind of guy. Thats why i love sequencers so much. And thats why live tweaking doesnt interest me the slightest.

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started on amiga with protracker ;)
nothing fancy.

_waka x / makunouchi bento

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elwood wrote:I started learning the music making in 1990 (or so) after I had heard some Soundtracker modules on my friends Amiga 500.
and you made some damn fine mods if I may say so (Deadlock, Sick on monday etc.) :wink:

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