@@pappurajpagare1153 I don't really use live recording very often. I have plenty of other software that lets me record and edit audio if that's something I needed.
@trulyinfamous what i want to tell you is different. Sampling On-The-Fly is found nowhere in many daws. Faat Tracker 2 clone is a small piece but but does wonders.
OpenMPT is good, but you should absolutely try Renoise. Sure, you can't render out songs in the demo, but other than that, you have everything. It's honestly easier to learn than other trackers.
@@archive94 Renoise looked interesting when I last heard of it but I've already got 4 different music softwares I use (LMMS, FL Studio, Furnace, OpenMPT) and I don't really need to add another. I also like my workflow with regular DAWs to be separate to my sample/chiptune stuff I do with trackers. I don't feel like learning a new piece of software right now either. That said I might check it out sometime but I've got so many unfinished projects across all my software that it's probably not good for my ADHD to add another source of them right now haha.
I generally relied on a bunch of different sample CDs from the 1990s to the early 2000s for this and the entire album this track was featured on. I'll reply back whenever I get around to finding out which exact packs I used because now I'm curious too. I should probably write that stuff in these projects.
Here's the sample packs I used. I'll add this to the description of the original upload: Sound Gallery - Charged (for main pad) Urban Shakedown (some drumbreaks) Masterbits climax - Bass (for sub-bass) Music Store Sound Service - Einstein (some leads) Best Service Advanced Media Trax Building Blocks (a single pluck) Essential Clubsounds 1 (all the acid samples and wub wubs)
this is called a slicer and they've been around for many decades
@@hoffer_moment yup. OpenMPT was my first exposure to that kind of sample work and I fell in love with its capabilities.
openmpt my beloved
cool vid. song is epic.
absolutely love openMPT
Sounds very awesome!
Sir , use Fast Tracker 2 clone it free & has a wav recorder , where you can record line in or mic on the fly
@@pappurajpagare1153 I don't really use live recording very often. I have plenty of other software that lets me record and edit audio if that's something I needed.
@trulyinfamous what i want to tell you is different. Sampling On-The-Fly is found nowhere in many daws. Faat Tracker 2 clone is a small piece but but does wonders.
this is awesome!
OpenMPT is good, but you should absolutely try Renoise. Sure, you can't render out songs in the demo, but other than that, you have everything.
It's honestly easier to learn than other trackers.
@@archive94 Renoise looked interesting when I last heard of it but I've already got 4 different music softwares I use (LMMS, FL Studio, Furnace, OpenMPT) and I don't really need to add another. I also like my workflow with regular DAWs to be separate to my sample/chiptune stuff I do with trackers. I don't feel like learning a new piece of software right now either.
That said I might check it out sometime but I've got so many unfinished projects across all my software that it's probably not good for my ADHD to add another source of them right now haha.
@@trulyinfamoustime to learn NitrousTracker, the new fork of NitroTracker for Nintendo DS
Wow, fantastic track, where do you took the samples from?
I generally relied on a bunch of different sample CDs from the 1990s to the early 2000s for this and the entire album this track was featured on.
I'll reply back whenever I get around to finding out which exact packs I used because now I'm curious too. I should probably write that stuff in these projects.
Here's the sample packs I used. I'll add this to the description of the original upload:
Sound Gallery - Charged (for main pad)
Urban Shakedown (some drumbreaks)
Masterbits climax - Bass (for sub-bass)
Music Store Sound Service - Einstein (some leads)
Best Service Advanced Media Trax Building Blocks (a single pluck)
Essential Clubsounds 1 (all the acid samples and wub wubs)