Bringing the Amiga Sample Library into the 21st Century

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 238

  • @RedMeansRecording
    @RedMeansRecording  Před 7 měsíci +87

    Hey all! I knew I was gonna get some stuff wrong in this regardless of my research, so here are some corrections:
    The Amiga was not Commodore's first personal computer! Dunno how I messed that up looking at Wikipedia.
    The Paula Chip was apparently NOT able to generate waveforms.
    The Turrican II soundtrack did not use Soundtracker for its music, instead it used TFMX.
    Please leave your corrections here!
    Here's a link to the Amiga ST disks as Wavs: archive.org/details/AmigaSTXX_originals_plus_conversions

    • @nicojar
      @nicojar Před 7 měsíci +2

      Fantastic video you put together here, thank you! Just a small question: can we listen to your intro music somewhere? (it's not in the description) :)

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 7 měsíci +3

      It couldn’t generate waveforms, but if you gave it single wave cycles it could AM or FM them together and output the result 👍 (well, it could do that for any sample - but it’s synth-head predictable with single waves!)

    • @apatoa3513
      @apatoa3513 Před 7 měsíci +7

      The Paula chip couldn’t pan iirc. Two channels went left (1 and 3 i have a faint memory) and the others right.
      Demos are awesome, but for me it has to be cracktros! Look it up!

    • @apatoa3513
      @apatoa3513 Před 7 měsíci +7

      Oh, btw, check out a software called octamed for amiga. Could do 8 channels + midi!!! ❤

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@apatoa3513 so much so almost every Amiga musician bought a box to blend them together and make the separation less intense 😅

  • @neelshiv
    @neelshiv Před 7 měsíci +111

    I would have watched an hour long version of this video.

    • @nicojar
      @nicojar Před 7 měsíci

      Same here!

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 7 měsíci +6

      I assume you’ve already seen Ahoy’s video from a few years ago? :)

    • @neelshiv
      @neelshiv Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@kaitlyn__L I haven’t! I’ll check it out, though. Thanks!

    • @swampflux
      @swampflux Před 7 měsíci +3

      Same. But i’m also glad there’s now a short version I can send to people that are new to it. :)

    • @magicalsynthadventure3216
      @magicalsynthadventure3216 Před 7 měsíci

      @@neelshivI did one too, that’s 30 minutes long 😊

  • @martin_emrich
    @martin_emrich Před 7 měsíci +34

    Just a little nitpick: Turrican 2 soundtrack was not made with one of the original soundtrackers. The master himself, Chris Hülsbeck, wrote his own TFMX tracker/sound system, squeezing in 7 tracks instead of four. Still my favorite game soundtrack to date.

    • @zaxolotl
      @zaxolotl Před 7 měsíci

      I've been curious, why it was it 7 and not 8, like OctaMED? 2 for each channel? did it work differently somehow?

    • @martin_emrich
      @martin_emrich Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@zaxolotl TBH I have no idea. But I suspect it either was too hard on the CPU cycles (the game had to be run, too), or the 4th "un-shared" channel was used for game sounds (shots, explosions) and thus had to react more quickly?

    • @jensdroessler3575
      @jensdroessler3575 Před 7 měsíci +4

      It was seven. It wasn‘t like the original OctaMED, where each physical channel was doubled by mixing two samples each, it was AFAIK mixing four samples into one channel. So those four mixed channels into one physical plus the three remaining physical ones, makes seven. How does it basically work, you ask? Well, Chris Hülsbeck took a page out of the book of another legend of game music, only this time it was one more famous for his Atari ST tracks. As it happens, this guy, I think it was Jochen Hippel, wanted to have tracker sound on the ST, too. You may know that the ST while having no official sample sound can playback digitized sound thru some trickery (similar to the C64). So he wrote a fast mixing routine, to mix four sample channels into one and this one channel is played by that trickery. There you have it, tracker sound on the ST. The routine was obviously fast enough to be used in games without taking up too much CPU power. So Chris Hülsbeck now took this routine and used it on the Amiga. It was probably optimized and simplified, because you don‘t need the whole range of tracker commands if you have other full channels as well.
      I haven‘t analyzed the TFMX 7v tracks myself, but my guess would be that drums and bass generally run each over a physical channel, while melody and chords are done on the four mixed channels. This saves some memory, as chords usually are sampled as such, so there‘s a minor sample, a major sample and so on of the same basic sound. This is not needed here because with those additional channels you can simply play the chords with a single note sound. Oh, the last physical channel would be for game sound effects. Except for the out-of-game music like the intro, end theme etc.

    • @Martin_Demsky
      @Martin_Demsky Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@jensdroessler3575on Amiga Eagle Player's TFMX 7V player routine was able to mute channels (afaik DeliTracker's not), so yes, 4 channels was mixed into one, probably at low rate for A500 cpu power.

    • @jensdroessler3575
      @jensdroessler3575 Před 3 měsíci

      @@Martin_Demsky Yes, the routine was reduced to the absolute necessary as far as I know. As said it was first used on the Atari ST which uses the same CPU at slightly higher clock.

  • @not-on-pizza
    @not-on-pizza Před 7 měsíci +17

    The reason the samples sound so high pitched is that the typical sample playback rate was around 8kHz (I remember the specific frequency of 8363Hz, for some reason), which is about two and a half octaves lower (and slower) than 44.1kHz.
    That comment had a lot more in it, until I realised how well-researched this video was. The one detail I'll add is that the music playroutines would often take sync data for animations directly from the music patterns (typically with the 8 command that was unused).
    Also, hard disagree that the time spent listening these old musicdisks is "wasted"!

  • @noisetheorem
    @noisetheorem Před 7 měsíci +4

    I was one of those kids in his bedroom in The late 80s first making music using an Amiga and trackers.
    I’m going to download these samples and put them in my Polyend tracker. That’s their most appropriate home.

  • @resetreboot
    @resetreboot Před 7 měsíci +17

    There's something cool about resurrecting the familiar sound of the old Amiga with a modern hardware. Love it!

  • @evgenius123_
    @evgenius123_ Před 7 měsíci +5

    Despite some inaccuracies -- thanks a lot for covering this topic!

  • @conbeaute
    @conbeaute Před 7 měsíci +16

    Great content. I couldn’t afford an Amiga, but always circled it in the catalogue.

    • @chumprock
      @chumprock Před 7 měsíci +2

      I used to go over a friend's house and watch him code on one... lol.

  • @lobstrosity7163
    @lobstrosity7163 Před 7 měsíci +11

    Oh wow, awesome! I was a huge Amiga fan back in they day. Had an Amiga 1200 but I was more of a Deluxe Paint IV guy than a tracker guy. This is great.

  • @relliker
    @relliker Před 7 měsíci +4

    From the (very) little I was involved in the Amiga music scene I think most of the sample libraries on those disks were built over time by various demo scene musicians/coders but I do not remember ever seeing a particular name claiming any library as their own creation. If memory serves, whenever a new demo/music track came through our P.O. box somebody in my group would rip all the instruments from each tracker mod in the received disk parcels and save them to our sample collection on diskettes. Copies of these disks would later get snail-mailed/swapped with other groups who would then add any new samples from our disks to their collections and vice-versa or to existing st-xx disks, so for a long time many st-xx disk kept evolving and rarely had the same content. My st-01 disk could have been all bass samples but I could get someone else's st-01 disk that could have been their drums or a mix of different instruments. I am assuming the st-xx naming format came from the fact that many started with Sound Tracker and the disk labelling format was "standardised" for ease-of-use or to honour the OG of trackers, the Ultimate Sound Tracker before other tracker names started appearing, like Protracker, NoiseTracker, Octamed etc.

  • @rikiba851
    @rikiba851 Před 7 měsíci +10

    The amiga 1000 was the first PC by Amiga, but not by Commodore. They released the PET in '77 and I think maybe the C64 was even before the A1000. The Amiga 500 was the first computer owned by me, which is perhaps less culturally significant than any other fact you can say about it, but its still very important. Piracy was king and it was fitting then, that the A500 was gifted to me when I was 10, along with a huge black bin bag of pirated games. When I got old enough to think about it, it became obvious that it had been stolen. At the time it was the best thing that ever happened to me.

    • @RedMeansRecording
      @RedMeansRecording  Před 7 měsíci

      That makes sense thanks for context.

    • @optydroid
      @optydroid Před 7 měsíci

      Wow. Forgot about that one. I would have pointed to the C128 as Personal Computer released before the Amiga 1000. the C64 (and c16 or VC20) was labeled home computer. Totally forgot about the PET, though. Nice one!

    • @smellylettuce
      @smellylettuce Před 7 měsíci

      Was about to say the same. We had a C64 and that SID audio chip rocked lol

    • @fluffycritter
      @fluffycritter Před 7 měsíci +1

      The history of Amiga Corporation is also pretty interesting. It started out as a company founded by disgruntled ex-Atari engineers, and then got acquired by Commodore, who didn't really know what to do with it, and then later Commodore's CEO left Commodore and bought out Atari.

    • @weepingscorpion8739
      @weepingscorpion8739 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Yes, it went: Commodore PET (1977), Commodore VIC-20 (1980), Commodore 64 (1982), Commodore Plus/4, 16, and 116 (same platform but different cases and memory configurations: 1984), Commodore 128 (1985), Commodore Amiga (internally, and retroactively named Amiga 1000; 1985).
      Obviously there were more models, variants, etc, so the PET has many versions, the 64 has a makeover in 1985-86-ish called the 64c but there were other models like the Aldi (64g), and the 128 also later came in 2 desktop forms the 128D and 128DCR. The Amiga has many variants the 1000 being the first, then in 1987 it was split to the desktop version 2000 and the wedge shaped 500, and it's the Amiga 500 that had the most success.
      I am glossing over a lot here and I am probably also missing something but it's a fascinating story. The micros are often called home computers but if you look at an original label on the Commodore 64 it reads: Personal Computer. Well, it does on the 64C. I don't have a breadbin to check. And yes, breadbin is what the earlier model 64s are called.

  • @MeriaDuck
    @MeriaDuck Před 7 měsíci +4

    There is nothing that hits my nostalgia buttons more than Amiga tracks and sounds ❤

  • @AnimalFacts
    @AnimalFacts Před 7 měsíci +3

    “The first personal computer released by Commodore “ 😂😂🤣🤣

  • @louisharkna9464
    @louisharkna9464 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Thank you for inadvertently sending me on a 30 min sidequest to watch (and listen to) a playthrough of Agony (Psygnosis), which also has amazing loading screen art! It was Lovely!

  • @AudioPilz
    @AudioPilz Před 7 měsíci +6

    KARSTEN OBARSKI!!!

  • @Ishkur23
    @Ishkur23 Před 7 měsíci +4

    To me the most "Amiga" sound was that flat, brassy trumpet which just sounded like a pitched up honking goose. Very lo-fi, slightly bitcrushed, a minor meme on CZcams as the "skull trumpet" sound. Whenever I think Amiga, I think of that trumpet, as ubiquitous like the DX7 slap bass.

  • @neonvoid
    @neonvoid Před 7 měsíci +3

    5:34 golden axe is actually insane on the C64 (with the sid chip) - its the best version of all (including the arcade)

  • @Screaming-Trees
    @Screaming-Trees Před 5 měsíci

    This is awesome. My cousin and I bonded over the Amiga. Well, it was mostly his stories actually. I was far too young when the whole Amiga scene was happening. I bought my first computer in mid 2000s. But he introduced me to the tracker and lots of interesting ideas around it and the Amiga. Thanks for the flashback mate. Pretty cool :).

  • @VarionJimmy
    @VarionJimmy Před 7 měsíci +3

    The feeling when I realised that what you found was the ST-discs. Wow!!! I have several of them on floppy’s.
    (I’ve had my A1000 since the end of the 80’s and made a lot of music with it. Now I mostly use Bitwig, but sometimes I dig out my old hardware/software.)

  • @robokid13
    @robokid13 Před 7 měsíci +16

    This is awesome, thank you for putting this together!

  • @DrChurro
    @DrChurro Před 7 měsíci +4

    Data Airlines has a great compilation album titled ST-FM. It came out in 2017 and used ST-01 and ST-02 packs.

  • @Philsy1971
    @Philsy1971 Před 7 měsíci

    Nice work! I was 14 when the Amiga came out and never had one, but I had friends who did, and I couldn't believe the sounds coming out of it.

  • @DM78
    @DM78 Před 7 měsíci +2

    1:34 the original sample rate for Amiga SoundTracker samples is about 8363 Hz (depending on PAL/NTSC differences)

  • @dyscotopia
    @dyscotopia Před 7 měsíci +4

    Hainbach just did a video on an old kawai home keyboard and now you're doing an Amiga video. Perfect comfort viewing for my brain while I'm laid up with the 'Rona. Given I started my musical explorations (apart from failed guitar and piano lessons) with mod tracking and would continue to use my Amiga in specialized cases even after getting more professional gear (it was excellent for crunchy hardcore gabber, which I did as a joke to conclude a set once) 😊
    There were affordable 8 bit samplers (I still remember mine announcing "welcome to sound perfect") so as well as borrowing samples from other mods I'd make my own from CDs and my k3 synthesizer.
    I always preferred MED and Octamed to the more well known tracking software as they had additional features such as robust sample editing capabilities and eventually an additional 4 channels of audio that could be played at the expense of CPU

    • @davideocassette6312
      @davideocassette6312 Před 7 měsíci

      Your story is so similar to mine, even down to your preference for MED and OctaMED. I sampled everything I could find with my Perfect Sound sampler, including my K1m synth. I was so annoyed that I had to buy an Atari 1040ST when I got into professional recording simply because it was the standard for sequencing. The Atari was otherwise a pretty boring computer compared to the Amiga, and I still sometimes wonder what would have happened if they'd released an Amiga version of Cubase.

    • @magicalsynthadventure3216
      @magicalsynthadventure3216 Před 7 měsíci +1

      You’ll likely enjoy my 30 min video on Amiga audio then, where I explore a tonne of obscure Amiga software 😊

  • @kingcognito
    @kingcognito Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great video - awesome to see people still finding Amiga sound in 2024.
    I’m still using my (nowadays numerous) Amigas today.

  • @TristanBaldi
    @TristanBaldi Před 6 měsíci

    Very cool video. Don't lie you immediately sequenced these with the M8! It is pure joy.
    Great work with this pack I can tell you indeed had a lot of fun with it and a lot of work too.

  • @OrangeDrinkMusic
    @OrangeDrinkMusic Před 7 měsíci +1

    Terrific video and great job on the sample pack!
    8:21 SHOUT OUT TO TREY FREY

  • @wacosta13
    @wacosta13 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I absolutely love this and the original video you put together on the Zero G sound files. Just ordered the Amigatakt pack. Thank you for putting it together!

  • @ottermods3212
    @ottermods3212 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Great work with the video, thank you so much for putting that pack together so others can enjoy the passion of making chiptune style music. The Tracker/Demo scene does not get enough people talking about it. It's an important piece of music history.

  • @ApexDubb
    @ApexDubb Před 7 měsíci +2

    It’s been years since my humble beginnings as an electronic musician using mod trackers
    Damn I feel old now😂

  • @Symmetriad
    @Symmetriad Před 7 měsíci +1

    As somebody who got started on music with trackers, thank you for this! :)

  • @fluffycritter
    @fluffycritter Před 7 měsíci +2

    2:29 The Amiga was not even remotely Commodore's first personal computer. The PET came out in 1977, the VIC-20 came out in 1980, and the C64 (their most popular ever) was in 1982. The C64 demo scene is also still alive and well, and there's still occasionally VIC-20 demos that are worth watching too (and are technically way more impressive as the VIC-20's chipset is way more primitive).

    • @fluffycritter
      @fluffycritter Před 7 měsíci +2

      Incidentally, Bob Yannes, who designed the MOS 6581 (SID) that was used in the C64 and C128, would go on to cofound Ensoniq.

  • @Robert_Babicz
    @Robert_Babicz Před 7 měsíci +3

    this is how i started my first music steps, the soundtracker on amiga :-)

  • @douglaswaterson7107
    @douglaswaterson7107 Před 7 měsíci +17

    Very cool, even though it triggers my long dormant Atari ST tribalism just a wee bit.

    • @pjohns92
      @pjohns92 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Fair play, did you watch Benn Jordan's video on brand loyalty?

    • @Death_By_Media
      @Death_By_Media Před 7 měsíci +1

      Video popped up on the Mac as I doing some Cubase file management on my Hatari booting Pi400 and 😂 when I read that as I caught myself going nah a couple times lmao

    • @ohheyitskevinc
      @ohheyitskevinc Před 7 měsíci +1

      I still use my 4MB STE. Ridiculously good midi timing. Mostly Notator these days since I lost my Cubase dongle in a move. The Amiga was great for samples and I used both but the Amiga 500 died long ago.

  • @Dr.Quarex
    @Dr.Quarex Před 7 měsíci

    Damn this video is definitely meant for me
    Time to use your work to update my old tracks

  • @collect-thor8064
    @collect-thor8064 Před 7 měsíci +8

    I’m pretty sure that Turrican II did not use Soundtracker for its music. Chris Huelsbeck coded TFMX which could mix up to eight channels to create more interesting music.

    • @RedMeansRecording
      @RedMeansRecording  Před 7 měsíci +3

      You're right actually. Just learned this from another comment. I knew I was gonna get something wrong, this is such a specialized subject.

    • @johnparker007
      @johnparker007 Před 7 měsíci

      @@RedMeansRecording While most Amiga demos and games used some form of the .mod SoundTracker format, there were3 indeed specialised formats, usually at 'some' CPU cost... so for a game that would use the blitter/sprites for most of its bandwidth, you could afford to run a more demanding sound routine (i.e: realtime bouncing two lofi tracks down to one ). It was a wild west due to hardware restraints, but one thing is for sure; the Amiga reigned supreme for a long time!

  • @clarkrogers7789
    @clarkrogers7789 Před 7 měsíci +1

    love this would love more history essays from you

  • @inphanta
    @inphanta Před 7 měsíci

    Great video. Nice and concise. This was more of a European phenomena so it’s good to see it being covered by a US content creator (the typical US-centric narrative for chiptune etc revolves around the NES and Gameboy and anything outside of that didn’t happen). Amigas were also a very popular with producers in the rave scene of the early 90s here in the UK too.

  • @namethief
    @namethief Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks for the history here - I was an 8086 kid, and I got my start in electronic music with a mod tracker there, and was really into the 8086 demo scene. I knew Amiga was really the heart of all of this, but never bothered to seek out the history of it all.

  • @elblanco5
    @elblanco5 Před 7 měsíci +1

    In the past couple years the demoscene has even been recognized by the UN as part of humanity's intangible cultural heritage.

  • @fromwithinuk
    @fromwithinuk Před 7 měsíci +1

    There is no "official" Amiga sample library beyond ST-01. ST-01 was the sample set that came with The Ultimate Soundtracker. Anything with a higher number is simply a disk of samples that someone has personally collected, generally by ripping them from games and demos.
    Also, Turrican was created with Chris Hülsbeck's own TFMX, Hybris and Battle Squadron were created by Paul Van Der Valk using his own music player, Golden Axe was by David Whitaker using his own player, and Agony was created much later using Noisetracker or Protracker.
    Paula's maximum frequency output without tricks was around 28KHz.

  • @DylanParisMusic
    @DylanParisMusic Před 7 měsíci +1

    This is so rad! Thanks for making this one Jeremy! I didn’t know a bunch of this history, love this style of video

  • @HoneyCMB
    @HoneyCMB Před 7 měsíci +2

    Rad! These sounds give off incredible vibes ❤

  • @plonzz
    @plonzz Před 7 měsíci +4

    this is such a well crafted video through and through

  • @Popbot
    @Popbot Před 7 měsíci +1

    i LOVE these types of video from you!

  • @sandrodellisanti1139
    @sandrodellisanti1139 Před 7 měsíci

    Great Times back then, i've started with protracker and in 1991 with oktalyzer, many greetings from brunswick in germany and please stay safe 🙃

  • @alexthebeast
    @alexthebeast Před 7 měsíci

    I don't typically buy sample packs- but I really love these sounds and really love you as much as I can some dude over the internet. I appreciate all the work you put into these! I just finished the battery mod on my takt so I'm going to sit in bed with 3 pairs of socks on and get nerdy

  • @digitalspecter
    @digitalspecter Před 6 měsíci

    Battle Squadron, a banger indeed! To this day I still sometimes listen to it :D

  • @Glitchhikers_Guide
    @Glitchhikers_Guide Před 7 měsíci +2

    Just wanna say that I've always liked your content and your history lesson vids from last year were some of my fav on synthtube. Glad that you're continuing to do them and wish I had a digitakt to buy the pack for. Your last video was brutal to watch (in a good way, vulnerability is badass) and I hope you're doing well. Creators like you make this community a better place.

  • @Mike-LoveSpace
    @Mike-LoveSpace Před 7 měsíci

    Man... if I could fire up my A500 today....
    Fantastic vid Jeremy. Really appreciate the work you've done here.

  • @VicViper26
    @VicViper26 Před 7 měsíci

    Absolutely loved this, would happily watch a huge series of things like this covering other old samples and romplers

  • @F_letc.h
    @F_letc.h Před 7 měsíci

    Excellent work once again. Appreciate you!

  • @ChristopherC207
    @ChristopherC207 Před 7 měsíci

    I love this. You have a gift for this style of documentary film making. Please continue to make them along with your other content!

  • @tonematrix
    @tonematrix Před 7 měsíci

    Yais! Loved the 90s sample cds vid as much as this one. You present the nostalgic info and feels so concise and entertaining at once. Also I learned utergrund is my new fav word.

  • @vinylarchaeologist
    @vinylarchaeologist Před 7 měsíci +1

    Fantastic documentary. Giving me real Ahoy vibes.

  • @OzzyMoto2K10
    @OzzyMoto2K10 Před 7 měsíci

    2:25 “Amiga 1000 was the first Personal Computer released by Commodore.” Commodore PET says Hi, not to mention Vic-20, C64, on and on. :)

  • @ungetuem
    @ungetuem Před 7 měsíci

    Would have never thought to see a demoscene video today. SO AWESOME!

  • @Orangetronic
    @Orangetronic Před 7 měsíci

    my dog is _very_ interested in the spinning 3d rat at 00:17

  • @askjacob
    @askjacob Před 7 měsíci +1

    As far as I can remember ST-01 and ST-02 were the original sample disks. After that, all sorts of distro groups were compiling disks of mainly samples ripped from .mod files as their own packs. Throw in cheap back of magazine public domain shovelware that often had bundles of sample disks and there is a jumbled mess of disks out there...

    • @davideocassette6312
      @davideocassette6312 Před 7 měsíci +1

      You're certainly not wrong but there was a particular series of ST disks that remained surprisingly consistent over the years. I had the first 20 of them on floppies back in the day, and they are exactly the same as the first 20 disks in various archives I've come across in the years since, including the most recent one mentioned in this video. I guess it's as close as we have to an 'official' library.

  • @SlashCampable
    @SlashCampable Před 7 měsíci

    This was so good! Love the mini-doc in the middle :D

  • @tomph3862
    @tomph3862 Před 7 měsíci

    Amazing content, as always. Happy New Year Jeremy!

  • @tricks-and-tips
    @tricks-and-tips Před 7 měsíci

    Trip back to memory lane.
    Amiga was my introduction into beatmaking. One of my friends had one and guess where we spent most of our evenings :) :)
    I started with fasttracker for Windows, I know, different era, but still the same tracker feeling for me.
    (and I embraced the 'unlimited' amount of tracks and basic wave drawing capabilities it had)
    Going to hardware stores with my recorder and sampling filter sweeps (hoping nobody would catch me) on their hardware synths so I could replicate those in fasttracker was such a cool experience, giving me 'all' the sounds I needed to make my tracks.

  • @jarkkojs
    @jarkkojs Před 7 měsíci +1

    OCS chipset could display 64 colors and even 4096 colors simultaneously in HAM mode.

  • @variousdispositions
    @variousdispositions Před 7 měsíci

    What a wonderful rabbit hole! Visually stunning video!

  • @ChanchoWancho
    @ChanchoWancho Před 7 měsíci

    Nice work! I stumbled across the ST disks last year and did exactly this on my Digitakt - although never considered releasing it as a pack!
    I then tried doing the same on my SP-404 mkII and had endless issues getting the samples to play correctly..

  • @cjlewis79
    @cjlewis79 Před 7 měsíci

    Yup. buying that pack! Another awesome RMR video. Ty Jeremy!!!

  • @EdgeOfPanic
    @EdgeOfPanic Před 7 měsíci

    Cool and good research!
    For young people it may be hard to understand but back then being able to play digitized sound on an affordable home computer was a huge step!
    Made some mixtapes myself back in the day (still have the parallel port sampler!) on my A500, classmates didn't believe a computer could do that.
    Also music disks with popular music of the time like the Digital Concert series and many more was so awesome back in those days.
    The later Amiga chipsets (ECS and AGA) had a neat trick that you can put Paula in 14 bit 44.1 Khz mode, combined with a 6db volume boost it still sounds very good even today.

  • @drd9973
    @drd9973 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I loved my amiga 500

  • @FuZZbaLLbee
    @FuZZbaLLbee Před 6 měsíci

    I did find a voice sample from the commercial game Speedball 2 ("Icecream Icecream ") and sample names starting with populous in this samplepack, so i would not be surprised if a lot of the other disks where samples
    from ripped game music as well.
    After some more digging, I found Xenon and lemmings as well.

  • @RemixSample
    @RemixSample Před 7 měsíci

    Awesome! Makes me wanna jump into my Lotus Turbo and play Pinball! Really well put together video and demos! 🎶

  • @robingroulx
    @robingroulx Před 7 měsíci

    Your mini-docs kick ass. I love them.

  • @subfifth
    @subfifth Před 7 měsíci

    Learned a ton watching this. Thank you, Jeremy!! Stay warm this weekend!

  • @CLINTFLICK
    @CLINTFLICK Před 7 měsíci

    Another great video and the pack looks fantastic

  • @saulcross9690
    @saulcross9690 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Turrican II was not scored using sound tracker, but using Chris Hulsbeck’s own TFMX which allowed him to mix down 7 voices into the 4 channels. Paula does not generate basic waveforms either. A few bits of fact checking needed, but still a nice video and good job on making some modern sample disks from st01 to st04…

    • @RedMeansRecording
      @RedMeansRecording  Před 7 měsíci

      I literally got this from a wiki so I'm frustrated I got it wrong

    • @grey5626
      @grey5626 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@RedMeansRecording The Amiga scene is older than wikis. ;) AmiNet was at for a time, the largest public file repository on the Internet. Chances are, you're not going to get a lot of accurate information on Amigas in 2023, because a lot of us Amiga folks have had to move on. I still have my A1200 and IMHO, consider the Amiga the apogee of personal computing, it's been getting worse ever since.

  • @JS-toro
    @JS-toro Před 7 měsíci

    Fantastic video! I'm getting into the tracker scene, its nice to see some of origins! Thank you for your hard work.

  • @dubcousteau
    @dubcousteau Před 7 měsíci

    Strange coincident, started two weeks ago to dig into Amiga Jungle music.

  • @krazywabbit
    @krazywabbit Před 7 měsíci

    Quality content. Thank you for the education and the hard work put in to the samples created.

  • @jarkkojs
    @jarkkojs Před 7 měsíci

    One thing that came to mind in addition to wrong specs on OCS's wrongly documented display modes: you could probably make many of them wavetables. Their lofi in the first place so "Serum size" wavetable could probably fit the essence for many of them. Or something like minifreak... I.e. convert to wavetable and envelope that for playback...

  • @gui_saba
    @gui_saba Před 7 měsíci

    awesome stuff!! love me some tracker music - especially from the Amiga. thanks for the great work

  • @Zach929U
    @Zach929U Před 7 měsíci

    Amazing video, and thank you for all the links to the sources. I'm gonna have a blast listening through the best demo's playlist.

  • @computer_toucher
    @computer_toucher Před 7 měsíci +1

    I thought the ST-xx samples were 22050 Hz and not 44100? Anyways. Always fun to see younger people discovering the old scene stuff! I came late to the .mod and scene game, my first tracker was ScreamTracker 3.21 on the PC which I got after watching Second Reality, but I got quite intimately familiar with it (and will forever love its "Adlib mode" for FM goodness :)
    Oh and Dr. Awesome lives not /that/ many tens of miles from me, which is a lol in the grander scheme (no I have never tried visiting, I've always been a huge fan but I'm not a creep lol)

  • @rankinsean
    @rankinsean Před 7 měsíci

    Love Amiga content. Pure nostalgia

  • @HKvalhe
    @HKvalhe Před 7 měsíci +2

    Fantastic 🤩 🤩 🤩 🤩 🤩 🤩

  • @antoineguilbeault8025
    @antoineguilbeault8025 Před 7 měsíci

    Love it jeremy more videos like this 😍

  • @happygolucky2231
    @happygolucky2231 Před 7 měsíci

    aahmazingue! a warm thank you 😊 i did my first tracks with an amiga 500 running pro tracker ✨

  • @secretstates
    @secretstates Před 7 měsíci

    This video is amazing, could even be a longer documentary. Appreciate everything you do Jeremy! 🤍

  • @rainermichaelcom
    @rainermichaelcom Před 7 měsíci +1

    i met karsten while working at reLINE software…. man, that must be over 35 years ago 😅

    • @no9or9
      @no9or9 Před 7 měsíci

      how was that?

  • @indigosnow_
    @indigosnow_ Před 7 měsíci

    Now I want a digitakt. Super cool video. Mad rad

  • @bipedal_earth_roamer
    @bipedal_earth_roamer Před 7 měsíci

    Sick video. I had no idea the capabilities of these older devices. The demoscene kind of explains the popularity in Pure Data / GEM and audio reactivate programming.

  • @xeroniris
    @xeroniris Před 7 měsíci +2

    Also Hybris is not soundtracker, it uses Paul Van Der Valk's custom sound system called "medleysound". You should absolutely check out his Turbo Imploder 4 tune made with it. Total banger.

    • @johnparker007
      @johnparker007 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Man compressing (crunching) files with Imploder was the bomb - I heard he is no longer with us - RIP Paul Van Der Volk

    • @xeroniris
      @xeroniris Před 7 měsíci

      @johnparker007 yep he passed away a few years ago. I loved playing his arkanoid style game "poing 6". RIP.

    • @johnparker007
      @johnparker007 Před 7 měsíci

      @@xeroniris I never saw Poing 6, RIP Paul, your music was always fascinating with its >4 channel quality, while I compressed AMOS demos I had coded

  • @ohheyitskevinc
    @ohheyitskevinc Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great nostalgic video! Cheers! With sample libraries, AMG (advanced media group) in the UK produced some. They’ve been at it since the 80s and have a ridiculous catalog.

  • @JohnLunney
    @JohnLunney Před 7 měsíci

    Great work, Jeremy!

  • @amordemae230
    @amordemae230 Před 7 měsíci

    fantastic video! really glad u r posting

  • @h2o1969
    @h2o1969 Před 7 měsíci

    Cool! This pack makes me wish i had a DigiTech.

  • @blahdelablah
    @blahdelablah Před 7 měsíci

    One correction, the Amiga 1000 was not the first personal computer that Commodore released, they had at least 3 more they had released before.

  • @EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEH

    The reason why these samples seems to have a wrong pitch and seem so weird compared to most common formats it's because the original ST-01 was a collection of raw 8-bit signed PCM audio recorded by Karsten himself using a variety of different synths. I don't remember where ,but there's another archive of ST-01 that tried to converted the raw PCM audio into a wav format and received some comments complaining about how weirdly pitched and sometimes trimmed the samples were, if anyone is interested in using the original samples most modern trackers like openmpt and milkytracker still support it.

  • @mechasartre3694
    @mechasartre3694 Před 7 měsíci

    This is so dope.

  • @thethrillofnoskill4521
    @thethrillofnoskill4521 Před 7 měsíci

    Oooo feel like i should grab these sounds for my polyend tracker mini 😂

  • @wul01
    @wul01 Před 7 měsíci

    There’s plenty of material samples etc. in the mod archive too .

  • @stefan1024
    @stefan1024 Před 7 měsíci

    Lovely video editing! ❤