Helpful ReplyThe 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music

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sharke
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2014/04/26 03:08:01 (permalink)

The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music

They could have just made it a round 15 and tacked Cakewalk onto there 
 
But never mind. Nice to see my beloved old OctaMED and current favorite Reaktor on this list. 
 
http://www.factmag.com/20...t-shaped-modern-music/

James
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craigb
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 04:42:07 (permalink)
Some interesting choices/omissions as expected.  It also appears that nothing has been created since 2004, ya?

 
Time for all of you to head over to Beyond My DAW!
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auto_da_fe
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 13:42:41 (permalink)
only ones i own are reaktor (rarely use) and garageband (ipad was free and so was garageband).
 
What about dyamite cowbell ??  how else can you "get more cowbell ???"  especially when you have a "feevah"
 
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Beagle
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 14:11:00 (permalink)
craigb
Some interesting choices/omissions as expected.  It also appears that nothing has been created since 2004, ya?


that's a FACT (Jack!)

http://soundcloud.com/beaglesound/sets/featured-songs-1
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Beagle
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 14:14:55 (permalink)
[pet peeve] Reaper is not free. [/pet peeve]

http://soundcloud.com/beaglesound/sets/featured-songs-1
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drewfx1
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 14:25:16 (permalink) ☄ Helpfulby Beagle 2014/04/26 17:43:54
The only things lists like these demonstrate is how truly and completely clueless the people who compile them are. Omitting Cakewalk while including virtually everyone else is bad enough from our perspective, but um, no Gigastudio? Really?

 In order, then, to discover the limit of deepest tones, it is necessary not only to produce very violent agitations in the air but to give these the form of simple pendular vibrations. - Hermann von Helmholtz, predicting the role of the electric bassist in 1877.
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Rain
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 15:15:44 (permalink)
Considering what else they did include, I would have expected to see at least one incarnation of a Cakewalk sequencer. The omission of Opcode Studio Vision is also strange.
 
OTOH, as much as I love Logic and even though I think it's the best thing since sliced bread, Steinberg's Cubase alone would have covered the basis for most of the other timeline-oriented sequencers. But since they included Logic and Garage Band, they have no excuse not to include Sonar, Vegas, Samplitude and all the others.
 
Where's Acid and where's Gigasampler? - these are the two reason why many Mac-based studio started integrating PCs into their environment.
 
ReBirth would have made much more sense than Reason, imho.

TCB - Tea, Cats, Books...
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craigb
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 15:23:49 (permalink)
ReBirth is a LOT of fun.

 
Time for all of you to head over to Beyond My DAW!
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dubdisciple
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 16:34:06 (permalink)
I think reason got the nod over rebirth because rebirth was far more specialized. Reason basically built upon rebirth and created a product far more useful to mainstream and even other underground genres aside from techno.

Imo acid would be among the biggest omissions. Many now standard looping features were influenced by acid, including Garageband and Ableton.
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yorolpal
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 16:38:58 (permalink)
Welp, to me it's about as informative and useful as tits on a boar hog. It's basically just a list of DAWs and some other stuff thrown in for good measure. Pitiful. The two most important "pieces of software" shaping modern music were the midi spec and software that drives every ADC/DAC. Harrumph.

https://soundcloud.com/doghouse-riley/tracks 
https://doghouseriley1.bandcamp.com 
Where you come from is gone...where you thought you were goin to weren't never there...and where you are ain't no good unless you can get away from it.
 
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Rain
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 16:45:01 (permalink) ☄ Helpfulby Beagle 2014/04/26 17:08:10
They probably should have included a couple of Torrent clients and keygens in that list, too...

TCB - Tea, Cats, Books...
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Beagle
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 17:12:08 (permalink)
Rain
They probably should have included a couple of Torrent clients and keygens in that list, too...




http://soundcloud.com/beaglesound/sets/featured-songs-1
i7, 16G DDR3, Win10x64, MOTU Ultralite Hybrid MK3
Yamaha MOXF6, Hammond XK3c, other stuff.
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dubdisciple
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/26 17:14:42 (permalink) ☄ Helpfulby Rain 2014/04/26 17:13:13
Also hard to not notice the exclusion of recycle.
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auto_da_fe
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/27 00:08:26 (permalink)
How about nyquist theorem...is that software ?

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craigb
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/27 03:01:09 (permalink)
Notepad.

 
Time for all of you to head over to Beyond My DAW!
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Moshkiae
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Re: The 14 pieces of software that shaped modern music 2014/04/29 00:15:12 (permalink)
Hi,
 
I don't think that many of these shaped music. 
 
I think that it made music a bit more static and controlled and less "free" from the confines of the usual rigidity that it has a tendency to suffer as a copy, rather than an original.
 
All in all, the blatant use of beats, is not a musical development, and is overdone, and just a passing phase in music, and history will surely show us that.
 
When looked at with a wider context, and include music history for the last 100 years, these pieces of software could facilitate a lot of music composition, and instead it is used for the most boring, repetitive and music that lacks desire, love, and a total dedication to the history and its inventive and creative endeavors.
 
I can handle, and like a repetitive beat, at times, but show me the beats in a DAW for The Rite of Spring, or a 5th Symphony! Rock music can do way better and improve on many of those and instead it sticks to the variations upon a theme with a different sounding bass note! And an even more boring drumming soundtrack!
 
I would like to see a lot more "anarchy" in these programs, and their use. Sadly, that is the one thing that is not found a whole lot, and as such, I tend to think that the creativity around it, suffers.
 
But, as a media, or instrument, it is probably very NEW and likely to improve as time goes by. And the next great composer won't use instruments but a DAW of some kind ... that ought to get a few feathers ruffled in the world of music!
 
 

As a wise Guy once stated from his holy chapala ... none of the hits, none of the time ... prevents you from becoming just another turkey in the middle of all the other turkeys! 
  
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