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From:
s.f.w.d.
To:
Date:
Wed, 12 Mar 1997 12:28:33 +0000
Subject:
Re: (idm) Rebirth...ohhh....
Msg-Id:
<199703122026.MAA05173@sub.sonic.net>
In-Reply-To:
<Pine.SGI.3.95.970312143519.11881A-100000@umbc10.umbc.edu>
Mbox:
idm.9703.gz
quoted 12 lines ---> > ---> http://www.citenet.net/noise/it <--- > > The above is the URL for the Impulse Tracker homepage -- Impulse Tracker > being a program (freeware, actually) for your PC that has no limit on the > size of the samples you use, and supports many sample formats. In > addition to that, if you've got the soundcard and cpu muscle, IT can > handle 64 simultaneous tracks of CD-quality (meaning you sampled ya shit > at 44.1kHz) audio. Impulse Tracker is the beefed up cousin of Scream > Tracker, the program responsible for each and every ".s3m" you've ever > seen. If you have ANY desire at all to write electronic music, and you > don't consider your compositions quite worthy of $2000 equipment yet, go > download Impulse Tracker.
I agree... considering that you can (after composing a tune) save each 'track' (say the drums, bass, lead, whatever) separately (save a 'master copy' with the entire comp, then save each 'track' with the other tracks deleted...) and THEN use something like Cubic Player to write high quality WAV files for each track, THEN edit each track to your hearts content, THEN mix them with some other piece of free or shareware software (possibly CoolEdit on a pc)... end result is a high quality wav file of your tune, for free. __________________________________________ sfwd@sonic.net wasted time in mass abundance