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Author Topic: Attention Music Writers...  (Read 720 times)

Nuzatch

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Attention Music Writers...
« on: February 27, 2005, 08:58:00 PM »
Well, I've been using Sibelius 2 for quite a while, and it's great for writing out piano parts and things that need written and printed parts, but I've been looking for something a little more lately.  Something I can mix in my own sounds and such with.

It's sad that I'm a third year music major and don't know of any programs to do this, but meh.  Anyway, I'd really like to do things like take samples and then play with them on my computer and then put them into songs, and things of that nature.

If you know of any programs (Preferably free ones, or one that can be made free *Wink*) let me know, I'd be very grateful.
 

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RE: Attention Music Writers...
« Reply #1 on: February 28, 2005, 07:27:00 AM »
http://www.adobe.com/products/audition/main.html

Not free, but it has a 30 day free trial. It's the old Cool Edit Pro program that Adobe bought the rights to.

It lets you take your music track, cut it up, flip it around in a wonky order, take that and slap it into another track, and stir it around till your heart is content...and I'm sure if you looked around you could find a free version of it somewhere...
 

IceDragonDuvessa

RE: Attention Music Writers...
« Reply #2 on: February 28, 2005, 10:32:00 AM »
Fruity Loops provides a wide range of instruments and effects to use. Its great for techno based stuff, but you can also use it for a more classic sound.
 

lonnarin

RE: Attention Music Writers...
« Reply #3 on: February 28, 2005, 08:03:00 PM »
I started with Fruityloops about back in version 2.5 up until 4.3 or so.  It was alright, and fairly compact so a quick download.

What really has has me obsessed in the past year and a half is Reason 2.5.  It's more geared towards electronic music and people who buy rackmounts full of drum machines, analog synths, mixers, etc and link them together.  The entire interface looks like one big rackmount on the front, and the back panel screen looks like all the same wires and setup you need to plug/unplug on a full setup.

It comes with some fairly powerful synths, the song composition/mixing is very well done, and it looks so similar to popular hardware that after you've been playing with it for about 2 months, you already know how to put together a sound studio with real equipment thanks to the sweet graphical interface.

It's about 3 cds and released by Propellorhead.  Refills and sample kits for it are fairly plentiful on p2p networks, just search for *.rfl.

I also suggest a good copy of Sonic Foundry: Soundforge wave studio for tweaking individual effects/compression on wav files you want to import to the program, and SOnic Foundry: Acid for some decent sound mastering/mixing of your track files after your done building and exporting them from Reason 2.

Those 3 programs pretty much do the same things that several thousand dollars worth of physical electronica equipment and then some.  Sure it'll never be as fun to play live as an Xbass 909 or a Korg Triton, but you can make a finished track sound just as good, if not better sounds quality than hardware.  Also, Reason is very compatable with Midi Composition and having external keyboards controlling instruments live, and unless you're running something like the last surviving PII 400mhz, it'll play very fluently and clean.

Again, the best part about Reason is how close the interface is to working with real and expensive equipment.  After you make 3 or 4 songs with it, you can walk into Sam Ash Music and spend hours in the electronics room making actual music rather than aimlessly flipping panels and making noise.  You can pick up any synth and know what each envelope and frequency sounds like, or program a drum machine with 20 patterns in less than an hour.

I never really got into Cubase, Sonique or ProTools that much.  Their interfaces give me a headache and everything looks like a silver alien control panel.
 

lonnarin

RE: Attention Music Writers...
« Reply #4 on: February 28, 2005, 08:28:00 PM »
As for the music styles I write with it, it usually ranges from Classical/soundtrack atmospheric, TONS of congos n Worldbeat, a whole mess of German Acid, Trip Hop and really angry Front Line Assembly-like Industrial bass deep in speed metal riffs.  When I'm too drunk to do that, it's usually that Richard D James era ambient drivel... bit more sinister and organic.
 

Nuzatch

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RE: Attention Music Writers...
« Reply #5 on: February 28, 2005, 08:36:00 PM »
Gotcha, I really dig a lot of Techno-ish and dance type things, but what I really love is when you mix Techno and classical(ish) sounds together.  Things like...hmm...some of Disgaea:Hour of Darkness comes to mind.  Things like that.  And then there's sax quartet music which i'm fixated on for some reason.  Heh.  Wrote an entire 5-movement sax quartet piece based on old NES games called NESax.
 

 

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