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Posted By
Lavina on 2010-07-26 07:35:27
| Re: the chipophone
:O Leesett az arcom a padlóra. Impy imádná!!!
My face have fallen down right to the floor. Impy would love this machine...
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Posted By
Csabo on 2010-07-26 21:34:54
| Re: the chipophone
That is indeed cool stuff, worth watching! Looks like something TLC would hack together
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Posted By
Chicken on 2010-07-26 22:08:36
| Re: the chipophone
Linus Akesson's website has some interesting background info (and lots of other cool stuff ).
http://www.linusakesson.net
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Posted By
TLC on 2010-07-27 16:08:42
| Re: the chipophone
Pretty brutal project... Though, I'm not that surprised by now -- looks like it has been done by someone previously winning 1st place at Breakpoint 2008, in the Console / Real Wild compo with a demo composed for an embedded microcomputer (see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sNCqrylNY-0 , ie. Craft by LFT ).
Nah, I won't hack something like this together myself... I bought an ESQ-1 some years ago, instead... ...Not especially this comfortable to play chiptunes on (...let alone the style factor ) ), but that's been "my" answer to the challenge nevertheless...
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Posted By
Csabo on 2010-07-27 19:03:27
| Re: the chipophone
Well, I'm looking forward to the videos of you rocking out on it showing up on YouTube nevertheless
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Posted By
TLC on 2010-07-28 10:42:19
| Re: the chipophone
Hehe... I should probably learn to play piano "well" ( = at all) to avoid coming through ridiculous first . ...And well, I should have mentioned that I do admire LA's ability to cook all ingredients together in such a nice way (experiments, gear, playing tunes and finally making a nice video of that). I did stop experimenting with the ESQ-1 myself shortly after discussing things about/concerning it with you back then... I could say "as usual", but anyway... I know the possibility is there; the synth mimics the structure of the SID pretty well (it's a hybrid subtractive synth with digital oscillators + controls + waveforms, with analog filters + mixing, just as the SID is), ...and it also really behaves like that in practice, at least after some experimenting. So if someone's after a synth to play sort-of authentic chiptune instruments, but doesn't really want / lacks the ability to tinker with microcontrollers and electronics, the ESQ-1 (and it's extended version, the SQ-80) might be a viable "alternative" (say, poor man's Chipophone in this regard...). It used to be relatively cheap, too (it's not a highly rated synth; it used to cost far less than a DX-7, or a Roland Juno series synth, or the other highly rated synths).
Edit: excerpt from a discussion I've just found while looking up midi and/or ESQ-1 tools for Linux
http://www.kvraudio.com/forum/printview.php?t=158292&page=5
---> c_huelsbeck - Mon Nov 27, 2006 2:07 pm STR8DSP wrote: Chris: Is this the synth you used for Giana Sisters, and Turrican?
Yes... Giana was pure SID chip though, but the ESQ1 Keyboard was my inspiration for a lot of tunes... <---
Didn't know I was just hitting the nail on the head... :-D Looks like Chris has been used to composing tunes on an ESQ-1 synth, even in the early years of creating his famous C64 hits.
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