So, some people made this thing about me.  Very weird seeing this pop up.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RlapLb-rirc

1,234

(11 replies, posted in Releases)

PDF has a lot of really great tunes.  He'll be playing some shows around town with me and deadbeatblast, so I really can't wait to hear more from him.

1,235

(39 replies, posted in Trading Post)

Lazerbeat wrote:

Never get married. My wife has veto power over all my T Shirts.

I have a similar issue, my girlfriend always wants to wear my shirts.

1,236

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

So, that's going to be hours of my life that I waste on this.  Waste is a bad word, though, as I'm sure this will be mega fun.

Yeah, this mix is the one my mother did.  I've had a lot of stuff going on these last two months but I plan on doing a mix myself and it shall sound a bit different, a little more glitchy and a bit heavier on the low end, maybe I'll even put some drums or add some sort of stronger rhythmic element.

Constructive criticism wanted on everything you hear: 

1,239

(10 replies, posted in Audio Production)

That is very, very close.  It feels like the original ADSR has a little less attack, but it sounds nicer the way you did it anyway.

1,240

(19 replies, posted in Atari)

aent wrote:

Can't you just use MaxYMiser for that too? And shouldn't this be in the Atari section?

I'm just looking for alternatives to MaxYMiser, just seeing what all there is.  I don't want to be the guy who only uses one program because he's never tried anything else.

Also, I thought this -was- in the Atari section when I posted, my mistake.  Maybe a mod could move the thread?

Back on topic, I found a great site here (http://atari.music.free.fr/) with lots of Atari software.  Some of you may already know it, but I'm just working my way down the list as the site is a great resource (the sequencer section includes descriptions of everything listed).

1,241

(19 replies, posted in Atari)

Hrm, yeah  I'll give that a try, actually.  I've been searching pouet.net for stuff, but I almost forgot that the ST was made to be an actual music computer and therefor has "real" software.

1,242

(19 replies, posted in Atari)

So, I just recently picked up an Atari 1040STF and a floppy drive to go with it and I'm looking for some music software to go with it.  I've already been using maxYMiser for a while in emulation and I plan to record those on the real hardware but I'm looking for some other cool software that I can use.  I have a MIDI keyboard controller and an arduinoBoy that I'd like to hook up to the MIDI in/out so I'd like to find some software that utilizes those.  I know ProTracker has an ST port, but is it as good as the Amiga one?

Any thoughts and recommendations are greatly appreciated!

1,243

(11 replies, posted in Sega)

I'd love to see the rom, or the source code at the least.  Thanks a bunch mate, this looks like a great program.

This is nice!  Finally a version that I'm willing to use to upgrade all my carts!

Aside from the lack of interesting visuals (out of my control, as I was told I couldn't do anything flashy), I'd love to hear ideas on how to spice up my live performance.  I know I need to look up and engage the audience more, and to pump them up.  what else?

Video to review here

1,246

(1,620 replies, posted in General Discussion)

arottenbit wrote:

why are you using a mixer?

Well, primarily so I can mix more than one sound together.  I use more than just one Game Boy - my Nintendo and my custom beepers and bloopers need places to plug in.

I also like to remove a little bit of stereo seperation on the Game Boy, I don't generally like the hard panning, so I set the stereo seperation with the mixer by panning the left and right signal a little bit less than hard left and right.

1,247

(1,620 replies, posted in General Discussion)

My setup.

I'll post real pictures when I've got a chance, but this is some pixel art that me and my girlfriend are working on.

1,248

(1,052 replies, posted in Graphics, Artwork & Design)

Done by me and my girlfriend, we'll be slowly adding more and more gear.