I tried to make a song that sounds like music that would be included with a Keygen!! pirate bad INSTAGRAM ► / leviniha TWITTER ► / leviniha SOUNDCLOUD ► / leviniha SPOTIFY ► open.spotify.com/artist/5hiUh...
Just turn off your speakers :D Easy :) As for internal PC Speaker, Windows today do not even have driver for that, and PCs today rarely have one installed, so I wouldn't be afraid of that :)
This sounds oddly nostalgic. The music is so Flash-like where it mimics the music that played in the back of games on websites such as New-grounds and Cool Math Games. It’s Lofi Techno where it uses its distortion and low quality sound selection to intentionally evoke a Lofi effect which many assume is associated with nostalgia. This is perfect.
@@Rex-zs9jd In order for it to be it’s own genre it must have some form of set theory that builds it. However this still can be classified as an EDM sub genre which we’ll call Flash EDM or Flash Techno. The point being that it takes the modern EDM standard of high quality pristine sounds and degrades them to a point that’s nostalgic to old flash games or old internet in general (Very similar to the way Lofi Hip Hop and Vaporwave use distorted and overall Lofi sounds to give a nostalgic euphoria to the listener)
@@deathrowlemon7367 There’s people that didn’t?? I’ve always loved keygen music and the demo scene and I come here and people are trash talking the genre in the comments 😢
@@deathrowlemon7367 How funny that you ask, Death Row Lemon. Literally, 1990's Amiga demo scene groups *Death Row* and *Lemon* are a couple of examples from the many. Although, on further thought I can't recall if either of those two groups actually had involvement with coding keygens. But they were active in the demo scene wherein keygen coders and demo coders would associate.
basically, if you got a product illegally from pirate bay for example, there would most likely be this app called KEYGEN. if you use that app, you can make a serial key for a product that you would be able to use for free. It IS illegal but i dont care
Dude I haven't been watching your videos (or any electronic music production videos for that matter) in absolutely forever, feels like nostalgia to watch again :)
if you're that uncomfortable with the questionable legality of the genre you can just call it demoscene because there are legit competitions to cram as much flashy music and visuals into as small of a memory footprint as possible in an executable demo file (often programmed in assembly or C)
This doesn't strike me as very keygen but it has a very like, 2003 Newgrounds animations sound to it haha. Keygen music sounds the way it does since it kinda derived from old cracktros and things on 8/16 bit computers (atari 8bit/ST, commodore 64/Amiga, etc) where the whole thing had to be crammed in to a few KB of memory. Many have stuck mostly to similar limitations, often still using protracker mod files with very small samples so they can be a very small size for easy distribution and hosting.
Nice work! Convincing keygen music nostalgia feel achieved. FLAWLESS VICTORY. P.s.: Have you seen UVI's new synth, 8-Bit Synth? I imagine it would've worked well for something like this. It's currently intro priced, but only for a few hours longer.
It is not "cheap keygen music using chiptunes". These so called cracktros INVENTED chip music in the 80s. This is actually a field of highly skilled artistic people bringing data compression, music and art together. The so called cracktros led to the later development of the demo-scene, and the very INVENTION of chiptunes: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crack_intro Most artists are actually from the demo scene helping the cracking groups out with this. There's usually a musician and a visual artist, who program their own oscillators and synth engines and bring it into a few kilobytes, either due to real limitations or artificial ones for added competition, and then program the arrangement or use procedural generation. A great deal of European game programmers, artists and musicians have come from the demoscene, often cultivating the learned techniques, practices and philosophies in their work. For example, Wikipedia: "The Finnish company Remedy Entertainment, known for the Max Payne series of games, was founded by the PC group Future Crew, and most of its employees are former or active Finnish demosceners. Sometimes demos even provide direct influence even to game developers that have no demoscene affiliation: for instance, Will Wright names demoscene as a major influence on the Maxis game Spore, which is largely based on procedural content generation. Similarly, at QuakeCon in 2011, John Carmack noted that he "thinks highly" of people who do 64k intros, as an example of artificial limitations encouraging creative programming." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demoscene
Rad video and jam. I remember having to sample tiny bits from dx7 into my old amiga 500 computer using a tracking software called Milky Tracker. Songs would take days to make.
@@mangotangogamez1278 oh thats a keygen no i know what a key gen is. Its software that generates a licence based on a name or computer id that via a algorithm get converted into a license code or license file or a windows user registry. But my question was what is a key gene. Never heard of it.
I think the coolest thing about watching how other people make music is sonically I know exactly what you're doing but looking at the DAW you use is like trying to read a language I've never even encountered before
sounds like some of my old work for dvt back in the days. It was very difficult in many ways to create the glide effect. I've needed 1 hour writing for composing 30 seconds of music. The divx dvt keygen tooks me nearly 3 nights to create