Digital Music Studio / sound / public domain
From: Michael Current (aa700@cleveland.Freenet.Edu)
Date: 10/06/92-03:05:19 PM Z
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From: aa700@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Michael Current) Subject: Digital Music Studio / sound / public domain Date: Tue Oct 6 15:05:19 1992 The Digital Music Studio (PD134) -------------------------------- Reviewed by: Dean Garraghty. I'm probably not the best of people to review DMS, because I wrote it! However, I think it is worthwhile knowing a little more about it than the details given in the PD catatlogue. I wrote DMS in 1989. The version discussed here is 2.00b. Version 1.75a was sold up until November 1989 when 2.00b was ready. The two versions are quite similar, so only 2.00b is in the PD. DMS was originally sold commercially in the UK and US. However, when I'd completed Digi-Studio, DMS was scrapped. That was about a year ago now, so I decided to put DMS into the PD. DMS is a set of programs for manipulating digitized sounds. Programs included are: main section, compiler, keyboard player and drum player. With DMS being for the commercial market, it is quite classy in its appearance. All programs use the console keys for selecting options from a set of option boxes. Main section ------------ This program allows you to create and play tunes using digitized sounds. You can also load in new sounds. You can also load and save tunes. "Tunes" in DMS is perhaps a bit of an untruth. The "notes" don't play in real musical pitch. They are just different play rates for the samples. "Notes" are made up of a 4 character code of letters and numbers describing various things about the "note". A very simple editor is built-in to type in your tune. But, to edit it you must modify a Basic program. In DMS all tunes are stored as Basic programs which are just lots of REM statements. You just look for your note and modify it before saving the program back to disk. A little knowledge of Basic is advised. Three samples can be in memory at a time, and your tune can switch between them as it plays. You can also load in new samples. The main section also has a utils menu which allows you to delete and rename files, as well as format disks, and take directories. >From the main section, you can also load in the other programs which make up the package. Compiler -------- This program will convert your DMS tunes into a stand-alone Basic program which allows you to play music using digitized sounds in your own programs. Keyboard player --------------- This program allows you to play music live by using the keyboard. You have your 3 sounds in memory and can switch between them as you play. However, you have to specify how long each note is to play for before starting, so you can't have mixed length notes as you play. You can also load new samples in from the keyboard player. Drum player ----------- Seven drum sounds are loaded into memory, and you use your keyboard to play them. What else is included? ---------------------- As well as the programs mentioned, you also get a very detailed manual. This is ready for printing to an 80col. printer straight from DOS. You also get a load of sound samples. Comments -------- DMS is a very classy package, because it was intended for the commercial market. The manual is more than adequate, and quite detailed in parts. Editing tunes is a pain, and the lack of real pitch makes DMS unsuitable for more professional work. DMS is great for a bit of fun, or if you want to get into digitizing. Also, if you are unsure abouting buying Digi-Studio, try DMS first. Although Digi-Studio is quite different and much more advanced, it was based pretty much on DMS. -- Michael Current, Cleveland Free-Net 8-bit Atari SIGOp -->> go atari <<-- The Cleveland Free-Net Atari SIG is the Central Atari Information Network Internet: currentm@carleton.edu / UUCP: ...!umn-cs!ccnfld!currentm BITNET: currentm%carleton.edu@{interbit} / Cleveland Free-Net: aa700
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