Audiopilz: *slaps roof of YT channel* Full Tracks, Extended Jams, Sample Packs: www.patreon.com/audiopilz Follow me on Instagram: instagram.com/audio.pilz/
@AudioPilz - a couple of synths (one is a different Quasimidi to the ones you've already done) that might be good for Bad Gear in this (pretty groovy and cool) clip... ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-X32Putu8nbU.html
1,200 comments?!? Wow… so heart ♥️ warming to see my console creation still loved in 2024! And hearing all those sounds again was a blast from the past.😊
Love your work, Wipeout & it's music has inspired me since my early years & can't believe this software went under my radar, even more hyped to get my hands on it with you behind it's creation :)
When I first opened Music and saw the name CoLDSToRAGE on tracks I thought this couldn't be the same legend from Wipeout, but after listening it was confirmed. I've got a core group of friends who still enjoy your products and regularly listen to your music with fervor to this very day. You're a god damn legend to us!
I remember in 2003 one of my customers brought his group and a playstation and we recorded a whole rap album in one night. I was so amazed because his beats sounded better than mine😂😂
Same thing.. in 2003 I was using this making hip hop sampled beats,they was aight but one of da mandem was moving like the rza and premo, I got a beat somewhere on you tube I made with music 2000
My friend crushed it with a Mackey and a BR1600 with this. I spent hours doing a jam in 2003 and he overlaid it with an acoustic jam. I missed that so much I bought 2 PS1s and I was scouring the internet for a larger memory card but not successful just yet.
I must have spent 10,000 hours of my childhood playing with this. You could go straight from listening to CDs with this amazing visualiser to making music to playing top notch games. PS1 was an absolute monster!
Putting 2000 at the end of everything always made things sound so much more futuristic back then. And somehow, those days felt like more futuristic times.
Music 2000 is how I got into music production, at least as a long-term hobby. Me and a mate at the time spent days painstakingly sampling individual drum hits, breakbeats, reeses and hoovers in an attempt to make the best Drum & Bass and Hardcore the world had ever seen, only for the samples to be completely corrupted on reload the next day. I loved every second of it.
My very first DAW was MUSIC on the Official PS Magazine demo disc. From there I "evolved" to Music 3000 on PS2, which allowed me to actually make money from music by doing commission work for local theater group and dancers. Then I graduated to FL Studio and I've been on that since 2006. Humble beginnings, and hearing those samples and cheesy guitar loops again brings a wave of nostalgia. EDIT: Also, I just have to mention: Making music while holding a gamepad just feels so right. It was great on PS1 and PS2, and it's awesome on Nerdseq, and I wish there was a way to use a gaming controller in FL Studio.
If you like using a gamepad, I just started playing with Korg Gadget on the Switch. I got it for my commute to my studio, but it actually has great vintage synth engines! I love the Oberheim emulation. The drums are okay, but there isn't enough processing to really get deep with them. They're passable but not great. Still good fun though. The only problem is that you can't render audio to the SD card because of Nintendo, but I've heard you can transfer your projects to iOS Korg Gadget via QR code if you want. For me the headphone output is passable if I just want a loop or two and the noise floor isn't going to be a problem (it isn't as god-awful as I expected tbh). Oh, and Nintendo also doesn't allow USB MIDI controllers either, but you can use a QWERTY keyboard lol. But yes sequencing in a piano roll with a game controller is awesome. It is really good fun if you already have a Switch.
@@trip-mode You kinda need the entire interface to be built around the controller or you'll just be switching between keyboard and controller, I presume.
Me too! Crazy to think that this was so inspirational to so many, turning me from a club kid wannabe DJ into a proper "producer", lol. So cool to see our humble beginnings.
24 sample-based monophonic tracks? Multi-track polyphony? Built-in reverb? Yeah, they're literally just giving you control of the PS1 soundchip, how lovely~
@Frikoppie As a German I don't know what's more offensive; being corrected on a possible trivial mistake with punctuation, or someone thinking they're being clever avoiding "hate speech". Do better and just watch the fun videos.
@@patrickhayden7206 and why don't you just correct your wrong writing instead of posting a new post complaining about a guy who tried to correct you? Seems like a useless thing to do.
Dude I was telling a friend about this program today at work. I use to spend hours on Music, programming drums for my first punk band 🫶🏻😂. I had the original “Music” before music2000, I think the first one came out a year or 2 before music 200. I also tried making Jungle, DNB, Techno… hiphop beats, rock tunes, you name it even metal 🤘🏻lol. I miss it dude. Thanks for this amazing nostalgic video 🙏🏻 love it 😁
as someone who makes music recreationally it blows my mind how much time u must have put in to make this video .. and learn this "instrument" inside out. ur channel is genius. thank u for providing us entertaining content
I was one of the original testers working on that project back in the day at Codemasters. Certainly was a unique thing to QA! (compared to Toca and Rally 2.0). Good to see it's still getting love to this day!
I found a bug that triggers in the wave editor, forget what happened exactly but it ended up dumping ram contents into audio, and would hang for a few minutes while screeching out the most horrible noise. I made use of it a few times by sampling it lol
Oh my god, I spent so much time on this and I'd forgotten it even existed. Absolute hours spent sequencing with a fecking PS1 controller, absolute madness! 😂Legend.
I had started using this after someone broke into my apartment and stole my equipment. I made a lot of remixes I still have 20 something years later. I just had to connect the audio to a cassette deck and you're straight. if you still have it.... KEEP IT.
I never had a PS1 because my folks were "anti games console" and always insisted that I had a computer instead. Noisetracker and OctaMed on the Commodore A1000 is where I started. By the time Music 2000 came out, I was already proficient in several trackers on the PC I used to think that Music 2000 was a bit of a toy, until one of my friends demonstrated it to me. IT ACTUALLY HAD EFFECTS and it sounded half decent! That reverb!!! Trackers didn't even have a reverb, and you'd have to simulate most other effects using tricks that usually involved taking up more than one channel. If you wanted reverb on a sample though, you'd have to load it in to a separate audio editor like Sound Forge, and add a reverb manually. To be honest, I don't miss making music using trackers. I am too spoilt by the multitude of VST's and features available in today's DAWS.
@@saricubra2867 I couldn't wait to get away from the crappy adlib-styled FM sound. The SID is far better anyway, and there are plenty of emulations of that.
@@pheargoth Imagine blaming the YM2612 for the bad music of Genesis/Megadrive Doom instead of the composers themselves. The OPL3 has far more channels than the YM2612 and you can produce similar sounds and other ones.
@@SproutyPottedPlant I hated the overall sound of the YMF262 / OPL 3 and couldn't wait to get a wavetable based soundcard. No amount of patch making could redeem what a horrible sound it made. It was great for crappy bell sounds, though. It was cheap, and that was the main reason it was used in low end sound cards. Like I said, I worked with samples on the Amiga originally, and the YMF/OPL series just sounded completely inferior in every way. There is no VST emulation of the Yamaha FM chips, because you can emulate them using any FM synth VST easily. Each to their own.
crazy that this software got a lot of dubstep producers their record labels started like Benga. It was a huge introduction for a lot of producers i have heard.
@@visisydandthevoid I’m not gonna lie is still think about it. It was so much fun! The song mode is pretty similar to this ps1 game, but still, it’s the only song mode I’ve ever gotten along with.
DUDE! This is just nostalgic deluxe 5000! The rookie mistake was turning off the console, That would always throw off complex projects with timing. When i used it as a kid i learned leaving it on until it was done was the only way it would not get thrown off. Thanks for this though man really got me inspired.
FACTS!! Made some banging kinda hybrid techno electro house beats, left my PS on for about a week b4 i had to give it up!! Lost loads of banger tracks!! damn this brought me back 4 real
I loved MTV Music Generator. It was so ahead of its time it's kind of crazy. Who would even think to put that level of functionality into a "game" on a Playstation but gosh darn it they did it and did it well. I remember thinking it was going to be like Mario Paint's music maker, but it was so much more than that. We lost something nowadays, we just don't get this level of outside the box thinking anymore at least no in the game space. The closest we have now is Dreams which also has an amazing music maker/editor in it. There is a whole community sharing their music on the Dreams servers, but sadly it looks like that game is sunsetting soon.
It was amazing for such little money what you could do with it at the time, even for someone who already owned an Atari St, S950, FB01and a crusty old Tascam stage mixer but not much else. Being able to put basic video visualizations along with animated texts to the minimal music tracks was like magic, had some recorded on VHS and loved them, sadly my VHS machine and PS1 are long gone, but happy memories of being 20 something in those times.
I spent many, many, MANY hours building tracks on Music 2000, note by note, and honestly it was some of the best stuff I ever made! I never used the loops, just built tracks bit by bit. I would then record my vox over the top and play to my unimpressed friends! It was my first DAW and I still wish I had kept that music because it was amazing- imho!
I knew a dude that made beats on the PS1 and they were incredible.. His beats were so sick that you would have thought that he made them in a full fledged studio.
I made a song with this 24 years ago, and now I’ve remixed it and planning on releasing it. Truly my first DAW, and very powerful one. Per note effects is sick
How did I miss this video? Great to see one of my childhood favourites be given a modern look - this game was practically my gateway into making music as a whole! I think I still have my old memory cards with the tracks I made back in 2003 somewhere...
Hell yeah. MTV music Generator is what got me on to making beats. I remember sampling Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas dialog and making some dope trippy beats back in the day.lol. Nice video.
I would start making a song until the file was too big. I'd save the file on a memory card, and then I'd start a new one. When the full song was complete, I'd record the files onto a minidisc, then cut the space in between to make all of the files one long seamless track.
Thanks for this one, this gives me goosebumps. Ive made my first ever Track with this software and now starting to run trough some boxes to find the tape i recordet this :-)
3:23 I love how old PlayStation games used this kind of common mapping for menu actions. Modern PS games all seem to want to use their own choices for menu actions...
bro there was a PC version too, which I had a burned copy from this kid named Jimmy in Junior high. MTV music generator was the bomb, and a great way to learn arranging, DAW midi style notes and velocity placement, and i actually made quite a few tracks until i got my first real piece of gear in 2003, the Emu XL7. Its great to see that you too started laying the crap out of things. i remember running tons of drumloops in parallel ⭐👍🙂 Also, i remembered burning the tracks on CDs so the PC version definitely had an export function. I want to remember it had Midi too, but i didn't have any interface.
When I was a freshman in high school this game came out, the small city I lived in here in New Hampshire USA didn't have a lot of rappers, but had a lot of talented guys we all just didn't have access to be recorded and not many of us had any sort of studio setup or anything yet. Well I remember these two sophomores, one from New York City, who they made an album together with entirely just the beach they made on this music generator. I was amazed as to how they were able to get the music off of the PlayStation 1 into some sort of MPC or something or just to get it into the computer to be recorded and have it actually sound good. They were the first guys to really sling CDs around school for five bucks a pop and almost all of us bought them just because we were friends with the guys but they were actually pretty decent for what it was at that time. I'll always think of those guys when I see that game. Big ups to Chanelynx haha
I think I had the demo of this game free with a magazine. There was a competition to record the best song. Recorded it onto cassette and posted it off. I came third. They wrote my name in the next magazine along with "D.i.s.c.ooooooh." My sister helped me with the song, and I didn't send her name in with the tape. Just want to take a moment to apologise to, and thank my sister. 😅
maaan, Year 200 I was 19 and "studying" at music college. I had my PS1 hooked up to my stereo and spent hours upon hours writing music on this thing. I even used it to submit all of my composition coursework. I would record the PS1 output on to a blank cassette and play my SICK BREAKBEATZ in my car for me and my mates. Thanks for the happy nostalgia hit!
@@patrickhayden7206 there was a whole universe of eJay software. I had Dance eJay, Rave eJay, and Hip-Hop eJay. But there were sequels and others like Techno eJay
OMG my first daw 😃 this also ran well on the PS2 and there was an accessory to connect to the console and I directly sampled the sounds of the old Roland...
I'll tell you the program that got me into music. It was called Making Waves. All you did was load in a sample. Then you manually clicked the little tiny arrows till it was at 1.0 or 2.0 or 4.0 and load loops into it. Then all you did was drag your mouse across the screen and it would just draw in loops up to about 32 channels on the screen. Nothing more than pan and volume per channel. Just draw big dots across the screen. A dash is a longer sample filling an area which you can interupt. You can't shorten a sample. You can make composition in real-time. What a blast. To cheap to pay for a license sadly. Remixed Doggy Style and taped it rather than buy a copy.
This game was the shit. In high school in 99 my friend was a producer. I used to just hang out at this guy's house all damn day long and watch him make beats. Bro there where some moments that brought tears to our eyes cuz we really sat there and searched old CDs from around the house for samples and he turned them shits into straight heat!!! Man those where the days.😢
I still have all my tracks and music videos on an old PSx memory card. Im dying to hear them again. Should have just told Blockbuster i lost the disc like i did with Syphon Filter 2
im blown away, both with this software and with the tracks you made with it! I've seen edm artists reference music 2000 as their introduction to music production and assumed it was alike to mario music maker or something equally as limited. Did not expect a full on DAW with sampling, 24 audio channels, and visualizers. Great video.
Ah yes, someone who is getting withdrawal from Roland not releasing a menu diving synth deeper than the Mariana trench finds something else to menu dive in.
This on the Playstation along with eJay and Magix Music Maker back in the days... I don't know anything about making or composing music but had a lot of fun using these programs on both PS and PC, inviting some friends and just making simple tracks together. Trip down memory lane.
I've been using that software for literally 25 ish years. I had it on the OG Playstation (with the parallel port) & still have my disc for PC. Great software. I never stopped using it really.
I had both versions. This is why i bought a laptop and "found" a copy of Acid Pro and Soundforge. Then i "found" Reason 4 and 5, then 20 years later and bored with DAW's i start to use hardware and find myself on this Channel today... it literally got you a subscription...
This is how I started it actually helped my transition into Reason, which led to me going and getting my production cert and now working away in my studio space.
I used this and its successor (Music 2002) on PC an was stunned that you could make your own beats without owning a studio or expensive equipment. Later there was Magix Music Maker and eJay, but neither of those could compete with the freedom of Music 2002!
I made many full albums of jungle, d&b, trance, hiphop beats/ songs on MTV Music Generator. I loved this program. I remember i would burn cds for my friends and we'd be plating them in our cars..
Yo, my distant cousin Maria Viskinde is selling her late Fathers Organ. Peter Viskinde passed away during covid. My dad sent me a screenshot of her facebook ad for his vintage 1963 Vox Continental. I cannot really coordinate getting this thing from Copenhagen to LA. Maybe you know of someone in the Vintage Keyboard business who may be interested. Admittedly Peter did not exactly make contemporary music😂 Buuut, this keyboard is sweeeeet! IDK maybe somehpw we can get this thing into a synth museum…
Late 2001 the ps2 version of this was my intro to making fully electronic music. I recently found a tape of some of my songs and theyre a lot better than i remembered. Fun stuff.
Man the RU-vid algorithm is pretty nuts… I started collecting ps1 games recently, and just today started downloading DAWs to dabble with making some music. Had MTV music generator 3 as a kid for Xbox and that was a lot of fun, all this pc software is a labyrinth of complexity by comparison 😅