haven’t heard that one for like 14 years, found it accidently today and now i am listening it for few hours already! BTW, this tune has it’s theme from Quadrophonia!
first program for me to make music with. i think i stopt using it after Magix Music maker came out. then went over to Fruity Loops 3.1.. still using Fruity Loops Studio
Me siento nostálgico pero a la vez feliz de haber vivido una de las mejores epocas del software cuando los programadores dejaban su vida en un software, y pulian de una manera genial los codigos, haciendo este tipo de programas que tenian tantas funciones y solo pesaban 700kb, hoy en dia como es mas barato poner una memoria adicional o comprar un disco duro, o un procesador, ya no se calientan por pagarle bien a un programador para que haga este tipo de joyas.
I love fast tracker 2 I have it on my own computer in DOS. I love the capability for music in this.... you can create music that is tons better than regular music that is published these days........... if you know what you are doing
Indeed, but let's not split hairs and argue over minor languagecaused details. Sure I could have been a bit clearer, but I took it for granted that it was the composer (yes, "arranger" is more accurate) of THIS PARTICULAR version that was in question and not the one of the "original original" so to speak. Nevertheless, credit should, if possible, be given where it's due no mather if it's an original or a cover version, both composer and arranger deserve that much.
"Composer: Unknown" well... not anymore. This tune was composed by Demon (no other than Allister Brimble) and released at the Commodore show in 1989... Check the "17bit Supreme sounds 1" at Bitfellas for the original :)
@RulezForeverAmiga No, it's PC. In the early 90's 286 CPU PC's were rocking 8 channel mods, even on the stock beeper. I had a 386sx and used to use modedit which was a 4 channel editor until I discovered scream tracker and ultimately impulse tracker which was 64 channels.
@bernatk Original DMP (no support for 32bit cards) was my first .MOD player back then. I remember using Cubic Player, Intertia Player, ST3.. and something else. I forget. I remember when Future Crew and Triton were releasing demos. But yeah, I really do miss those days. The 486 DX2/66 and Pro Audio Spectrum 16 were perfect for demo and .mod/.669/.xm/.s3m writing.