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(8 replies, posted in General Discussion)

There's Chipfest 7 coming up, and also SuperByte in Manchester and some other stuff, some big stuff with some big names such as Henry Homesweet and Dubmood


FUNF @ The Roadhouse, Manchester - Saturday 7th July - 7.00pm

This is an unorthodox bill, an electro-pop gig meets a surge of 8-bit waves. I'm on first and then there are three electro-pop bands: The Imogen Styles, The Fevers, Saltylips and one more band to be booked whenever they get round to it.

Good drink offers and hours full of lightspeed, top notch music so get down and have a good time.

we're just lucky

i can get you a backdoor pass if that's your treacle me old china

was also trying to find the paypal button to put on something but i don't have any website that's mine that supports editable html codec

because the free download is on Sociopath, the net label i've been with for absolute years, and the downloads there still come back to me in a good way. and if i set i price i can count how much i can make depending on the people, with an open donation i don't know if it'll make a quid from 50 people or 50 quid from one person

http://skinwalker.bandcamp.com/
http://skinwalker.bandcamp.com/
http://skinwalker.bandcamp.com/

I've only just now put up the ability to donate towards me and my music for an easy £1 for 'Raw EP', 4 tracks of pure LSDJ, and £2 for 'Berserker', harsh dance Renoise bitpop. You also have the ability to download them for free here http://sociopath-recordings-artists.blo … er-uk.html but if you have some loose change lying in your account then all of it does come back to you in a good way. Bandcamp will now be where I promote and sell my next release which will be an extension of my EP so keep your ears and your eyes peeled.

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(1 replies, posted in Software & Plug-ins)

If Puredata and Supercollider are two synths,
din is a synth of a 3rd kind.

It forgets history,
To not repeat it.

It doesnt hide analog music hardware,
In digital music software.

You had pulse, sine, triangle and sawtooth,
And went forth and made electronic music.

Now there is just the Bezier curve.
Go make your pulse, sine, triangle and sawtooths.
Or this, this, this and this.

This is nothing new.
Some old men did it in the 60s!
Punched numbers into cards.

Now you edit waveforms in a GUI,
And watch the sound change before your very ears.

Has it got ADSR?
Its got DADSARSADS.

Filters?
Infinite length delay lines.
With Bezier envelope for feedback and volume.

Modulation?
Bezier on Carrier and Modulator.
Eat that Chowning.

Notes?
Notes! Notes! Notes!
Infinite microtones between two tones.

Livecoding?
In Tcl.
Like LISP, but no ((((:-))))

Collaboration?
MIDI. OSC. IRC.

I want two!
Get it while it's free.

Information sourced from http://dinisnoise.org/about/

Follow on Twitter https://twitter.com/#!/al__dinja
Friend on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/people/Al-Dinja/592883573

they'd end up pulsating

well... that's ok. nah it seems like a killer show, adrian said to me aswell about some video game convention and megabyte are hosting the afterparty so ask him about dj'ing on that or playing with tin foil hat brigade

is that something CDK is putting on or are you inviting me to play?

yeah man, his first UK show too

no no, it was a DMG version of a song off my album Berserker called 'Versus' but it is influenced heavily by Sabrepulse's 'White Tiger'. it's a pretty top song, i basically did what Nullsleep did with 'Destination Tomorrow'

JUST AN 8-BIT OF THIS AND THAT by James Hodson (Skin Walker)

As Fake-Bit pioneers : ( state in their chippy chipper track Twin Chevron Action Flash, the highly acclaimed basis for one of Sabrepulse's best remix works, "8-bit's the way, We're 50,000 strong" and it sure did feel like that last night at Retro Bar, despite the capacity only being able to fit a close 100.

The night started off with an entrance into a melée of gaming systems set up on trestle tables, free to play, and free sweets. The array of games available was mesmerizing, like a small warehouse stock ready to plug in and start up. A DJ booth above the level of the rest of us, such as a pedestal, made these disk jockeys seem immortal, pumping out tunes from Sabrepulse, Nullsleep, Je deviens dj en 3 jours and many more lo-fi floor fillers. Almost a two hour gap between entry and the first set rose the suspense for this monumental birthday night. The crowd began to saunter in, two or three at a time, helping themselves to the treats that were to behold after walking through that door, and the atmosphere seemed friendly. There was rumoured that a journalist from Chimp Magazine was down to review the night, but the promoters were left standing when they realised that that was being replaced with two photographers, Nick Benke and Andrew Haslam, ready to snap anything that moved.

The time is now 10.45pm and I'm just about ready to take the stage. I finish my Stella, have a toilet break, and jump on up. The first song that plays amongst the speakers is Solar, a short 2+ minute track that kicks right into the bass. People took to the floor, contrasting with me, to dance. A quick 20 minutes flies by, six tracks already been fired and the crowd applauds this small town, Greater Mancunian bred 8-bit magician (I kid, I only know from what I learnt out of my Paul Daniel's Magic Set 100). It is now Poisoncut's turn.

This Liverpudlian lad who spends his spare time chipbending vintage consoles and making them sound as if it's being fed through a Korg Electribe
shocked me, and hopefully others who were there to witness. He played a few songs that recently I've listened up on, but then he came out with a new track, a new work and it entirely blew everything else he played before then out of the shark-infested waters. His mix of both core 8-bit sounds and snappy snare-to-bass rhythms really hits home for those who wish to take a break from conventional chiptune imitations. Half an hour passes this time, and Poisoncut gets a standing ovation from a venue that may as well be a shed in the garden of a mansion.

Now is the time. Now is the time for chipzel to step up for her inaugural welcome to this fine night, and this fine establishment. She brought along with her, from what I could gather, some friends from her home country of Northern Ireland. I am not being biased, but those kids really made the night what it was, selling a certain enthusiasm that hadn't been seen from the previous sets, or hours. She was confident, she knew what to do as that stage was hers and she was also a little bit drunk, but who wasn't? And who wants to stop that? She started off with Something Beautiful, a fan favourite that she knew would get this party going. Song after song, the crowd got restless, wanting more and more of this sweet serenade from her and her two Game Boys. Gradually, people began to join, people began to dance and eventually got up on stage, as she blasted out these heartfelt but very hard worked sounds, individually and simultaneously. chipzel is a class act, and just like me and Poisoncut, contributed to what was an intense night of what's-going-to-happen's.

chipzel walks off the stage, cleans up her gear, as I do, and sits back down awaiting the beginning of the MegaByte birthday afterparty. Incredible.

that is how it's going to happen in September, i have that written down now so i have a nice thing to say in advance

I FORGOT, I HAVE ALOT ON MY PLATE LIKE ROLLING CIGS OUT OF WOODBINE AND TRYING TO WAKE UP

but the DJ sets were impeccable, James from CDK was there busting moves and creating shapes and Yanni had a good one
all round mega night made possible thanks to our close Scouse kings

HAPPY NAO?