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Jungle rave track test on NitroTracker for Nintendo DS 2 года назад


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Jungle rave track test on NitroTracker for Nintendo DS

Instagram @adelaide_acid Was about to crap my pants and buy the m8 tracker for a portable jungle machine yesterday. Coincidentally i had also pulled out the old ds lite and r4 card to play some good ol nes open tournament golf. Was watching modernvintagegamers video about ds homebrew and he had a clip of the ds running the homebrew tracker software, nitrotracker. Here is my review: :::::::: Immediately I had to give it a shot. Honestly a really great little tracker. It's got everything you need to make yourself some sweet sweet old school jungle and rave music. It can play samples chromatically and has a volume envelope. Unfortunately there aren't any effects which means no filter and there also isn't any chopping or sample offset commands. Technically you can "chop" if you keep loading the sample and crop it each time but i don't think it would be very precise. It's much quicker to just pre chop your sample in renoise. It probably takes less than a minute to slice a break in renoise with a plugin and then individually export said slices. Add another minute on top of that to reduce the sample rate a little bit. You have something like 3mb of ram to work with which could easily hold a couple different 2 bar break samples as well as some stabs, vocal chops, and other synth sounds. A good thing about nitrotracker is that you can create multisampled instruments from your chops so you can map them out over the keyboard. It's a bit fiddly bc it automatically pitches the samples up and down when you map them to keys above and below middle C so you have to transpose them after placing. What I've done is I've made a few empty projects that have different breaks already loaded up and transposed so i can use them as templates. Once you have everything setup, making music is incredibly easy and fast. I really have to applaud the developer here for their smart use of the touch screen and making things so intuitive. One of my biggest concerns about the m8 tracker is that having so few buttons is that having so few buttons woukd really slow down your note input. I shared the same concern for nitrotracker before i started using it. Happy to say that inputting notes is really fast here. You can quickly create drum patterns and melodies with the keyboard on the touch screen and when combined with step jump, it's even quicker. Having a button shortcut to jump the cursor to the top or bottom of the pattern is a nice touch too. I think that's pretty much all I need to say about it. I think I can comfortably say that I buying the m8 tracker anymore (for now at least, if it ever becomes available locally here in Australia then i will get one). It's a dumb comparison but I'll compare anyway. Similarities is obviously the size and portability. You would probably get better battery life on the DS lite over the m8 as it's not an intensive app and the DS lite already has really solid battery life. I haven't used the m8 tracker so i can't speak too much on how it controls. Obviously the m8 is more complex and still controls well, but from what I can see in videos, NitroTracker on the DS is much better for inputting notes. Another thing that bothers me about the m8 is that I've heard that the phrases (where you enter notes) are only 1 bar long and that you have to chain them together which just seems really weird to me. Patterns can be much longer than a bar on nitrotracker however rearranging things on the fly and actually performing like you can with the m8 isn't a thing on nitrotracker. Apart from that, the m8 is infinitely more powerful with filters, fx, synth engines, sample memory, etc etc. For my needs, nitrotracker is perfect, and if i ever want to take something I've made on the ds to the computer to polish it up, nitrotracker uses .xm format. That's enough rambling for now. Bye

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