This is my chip music seminar from Revision 2011.

When working with a soundchip such as the SID or the 2A03, the artist faces a number of technical constraints that limit, guide and inspire the creative process. The seminar will highlight and briefly explain some of these constraints, with particular emphasis on how they influenced artists during the golden age of chip music to give rise to some of the clichés that now define the genre. We will also see (and hear) how variations of the same constraints have emerged in other genres and ages, and how composers such as Bach have tackled them in similar or different ways.

Here's a technical description of the slide show presentation hardware.

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Anonymous

Tue 3-May-2011 11:55 Great talk, interesting aspects.



Cheers, Markus

Anonymous

Thu 5-May-2011 08:24 One of the most interesting talks I've ever heard.

/Max

Anonymous

Wed 11-May-2011 00:08 Great presentation!

Anonymous

Sat 14-May-2011 20:16 Thanks Linus - a really interesting talk.



Your comments about the "famichord" made me wonder: to what extent are chip tunes is influenced by Japanese music? That chord (minor[no 5]m7) is quite reminiscent of the pentatonic minyo scale, and I couldn't help noticing that all the composers on the famichord demo are Japanese.



An interesting experiment if you have a piano synth is to set the number of channels low (mine does 2 and 4, but not 3) and see how this influences your playing style. Its surprising how much you can do with few voices, and how the ear seems to "retain" notes that only sound momentarily.



[SG]

hisham_hm

Hisham HM

Sun 5-Jun-2011 01:55 Another great example of human "musician playing at effect rate" would be the tapping sequence of Eddie Van Halen's eruption. He plays a monophonic sequence so fast that you can clearly devise the chords (and with the distorted guitar sound it actually sounds quite a bit like a chiptune. :)

Anonymous

Thu 17-Nov-2011 22:36 One of the most interesting talks I've ever heard.

/Max +1 +1

Anonymous

Thu 29-Dec-2011 23:12 Great presentation. Another good example of chip music on real instruments is Russian balalayka, arpeggio is very common. Just listen to Aleksei Arkhipovsky playing "Mission Impossible theme" (video available on Youtube).

Anonymous

Sat 12-May-2012 17:17 Yes learned something today, thanks a lot!



Dr. RemiX

Anonymous

Thu 17-May-2012 10:25 This was the best morning I've had for a long time, drilling into and deconstructing the art of sid music composition. The only bad thing was that the talk was too short. More! We want more! Thanks for another great time, Linus!



/Per

mporshnev

Max Porshnev

Fri 16-Nov-2012 20:11 Hi Linus, if you wanna more questions, here they are:



When you use HBlanks for updating the waveform (like in Craft project) how do you keep the sample rate constant during VBlanks?



In Phasor project, does the output signal contain interlaced video? Do I understand correctly that generating a blackwhite composite video signal is much less difficult?

Anonymous

Fri 5-Jun-2015 09:22 Cool intro to chiptunes!



I was wondering what is the name you give to channel oriented trackers (in opposition to pattern oriented). I hear something like "hyper trackers" but I'm not sure.

The question, if picky, is because I am in the process of searching for such software.



Thanks a lot!

lft

Linus Åkesson

Mon 8-Jun-2015 08:26 Yes, the word I use is "hypertracker". The original definition of the term is here:

https://chipflip.wordpress.com/2012/12/30/soundtrackers-hypertrackers-and-acidtrackers/