Adlib Tracker II Tutorial: The Basics from Carl Peczynski on Vimeo.
Author: Peter Swimm
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Stu “Elements” out on Ubiktune
Interesting new work from Stu. Details:
Stu’s “Elements” is an unpredictable concept piece, the journey is turned into music with the help of the Atari’s YM soundchip and just the right touch of post-production. The album has a vast, original sound… staying mysterious and atmospheric throughout the entire experience. As the final chord, Extraboy combines all the elements together in an aural feast that will leave you completely satiated. Be careful, this combination might be more powerful than you can handle!
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Pixelh8 to compose on WWII Era Chips?
Say what you want about how he positions his role and importance in the growth of the current scene, the following project from his mailing list DOES sound interesting. The email:
“I am very excited.
Recently I Pixelh8 have had the good fortune, with the help of The National Museum of Computing and the Performing Rights Society Foundation, to have a huge music project of mine funded. The project is to write a piece of music composed from sounds from some of the rarest and earliest computers and computing devices in the world to be performed at the World War II code breaking centre Bletchley Park, Milton Keynes on March 20th and 21st 2009.The project entitled “Obsolete?” will make use of machines such as Colossus Mark 2 world’s first programmable, digital, electronic, computing device used for code breaking in World War II and probably one of, if not the most significant computer in the world. Another computer to be used is Elliot 803 from 1960, a giant machine that has only 4k!!! ithink it’s one of only three left in the world and I love it!
The blogs leading up to it have now also been declassified and can be accessed by going here http://pixelh8.co.uk/category/obsolete/
On the flipside the piece will also feature several other commonplace computing devices that have either been discarded or branded as “Obsolete?” as time moved on, so yes I will be using the ubiquitous BBC Micro too.
This will be chip tune music but unlike any other you have ever heard.
These machines have been restored to working order and in some cases completely reconstructed by volunteers and researchers at TNMOC, and I am honoured to be associated with these hard working men and women and the unique history of Bletchley Park.
This is to be one of many computer music related projects I am hoping to bring to the museum and I am very, very excited. I strongly recommend you go and visit The National Museum of Computing in the meantime, but you won’t get any more information about “Obsolete?” just yet, as it is classified information.
Pixelh8
via matrixsynth
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Grg Vs. Timbaland legal update
CHIPFLIP writes:
GRG and his crew were making three claims: sampling, performance rights, producer rights. The court did however only consider one of these: the performance rights. According to them GRG’s cover was not unique enough to grant him any kind of authorship rights, so the case was basically lost. This meant that they didn’t have to consider whether the song was sampled or not.
Hopefully they can work out some kind of compensation from the douche who exclaimed “it’s a video game, jerk”.
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TinySIOPM MML appeared
gamingjustin explains:
The site is designed to let people post and edit other people’s flash applications; neat idea. What’s even more neat is someone wrote an MML Editor and whipped up a song for demonstration. Anyone can write a song on-the-fly in a browser using MML.
Check it out
Click in the right window and hit shifter+enter to start/stop the songs playback.