"Music 64" (1984)
Posted: 03/08/2011 - 18:06
Another early attempt to bring the magic of SID composition to the masses. To my mind it failed but there is a modest saving grace.
One more Ebay win which I uploaded, though just for completeness in this case:
http://www.Leftiness.org/Music_64.zip
In common with others of the era, this utility was written in BASIC. Loading speed was dragged to a crawl with no fastloader, so I didn't bother TAPSERVing the entire tape. The main program was converted to PRG whilst only the song file was directly compiled from tape. Both loading speed and upload file size was reduced.
The interface is terrible. The tedious idea is to type your composition, note by note, in silence. You're supposed to treat it as a simple musical word processor, the approach to computer-aided composition at the time, though there is no real instruction manual - nor any way I found to get past entering the first note's data. The principle may be OK with sophisticated tracker software, but not with a crude program written with kids in mind.
However, it does have the sample Entertainer music to commend it. Load it in and adjust the basic playback parameters to squeeze out what little instantly available sampling potential there is. You can isolate the channels, play with the speed and adjust the voice presets.
And if anybody feels like writing an applet to convert choice SID files to work with this thing, we could recycle ourselves a rudimentary SIDplayer out of this white elephant!
One more Ebay win which I uploaded, though just for completeness in this case:
http://www.Leftiness.org/Music_64.zip
In common with others of the era, this utility was written in BASIC. Loading speed was dragged to a crawl with no fastloader, so I didn't bother TAPSERVing the entire tape. The main program was converted to PRG whilst only the song file was directly compiled from tape. Both loading speed and upload file size was reduced.
The interface is terrible. The tedious idea is to type your composition, note by note, in silence. You're supposed to treat it as a simple musical word processor, the approach to computer-aided composition at the time, though there is no real instruction manual - nor any way I found to get past entering the first note's data. The principle may be OK with sophisticated tracker software, but not with a crude program written with kids in mind.
However, it does have the sample Entertainer music to commend it. Load it in and adjust the basic playback parameters to squeeze out what little instantly available sampling potential there is. You can isolate the channels, play with the speed and adjust the voice presets.
And if anybody feels like writing an applet to convert choice SID files to work with this thing, we could recycle ourselves a rudimentary SIDplayer out of this white elephant!