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As requested by quite a few of you and being asked which tracker I would recommend. I have decided to create a video of myself exploring the most common music tracker programs on the Amiga, I have chosen Protracker, Octamed and Soundtracker Pro 2 which is the one that I use. I try to create a small piece of music on all three tracker programs and see how each of them are to use. Here is my previous video on recreating a tune from Turrican 3 C64 onto the Amiga. • From SID to Paula - Turrican 3 C64 mu... My Turrican 3 remake is now available to download as an 320k MP3 at Remix 64, Please feel free to vote and review to show your support :o) http://www.remix64.com/track/madija/t... For those who requested the actual MOD file (it's an STP MOD only and wont work on anything but Soundtracker Pro 2, however it can be played on Eagleplayer2 (Though it doesnt play it so nicely) and any others that support the STP2 or STP3 mod format. Update: OpenMPT now supports STP2 format. Get Soundtracker Pro 2 by Marco Nelissen here from Aminet: http://aminet.net/package/mus/edit/pro2 About the Soundtracker Pro 2 Fileformat: The fileformat source file: https://mega.nz/#!ogdihYoZ!RUJzPbghai... OpenMPT tracker thread on STP: https://github.com/cmatsuoka/libxmp/i... OpenMPT Version info: https://bugs.openmpt.org/view.php?id=755 Subscribe here: / @msmadlemon My Amiga videos: • Amiga My Nostalgia Time videos: • Nostalgia Time My Commodore 64 videos: • Commodore 64 My Vintage Repair videos: • Плейлист My Audio related videos: • Vintage Audio More info about music trackers (Quoted from Wikipedia) "A music tracker (short version tracker) is a type of music sequencer software for creating music. The music is represented as discrete musical notes positioned in several channels at discrete chronological positions on a vertical timeline. The file format used for saving songs is called a module file. A music tracker's user interface is usually number based. Notes, parameter changes, effects and other commands are entered with the keyboard into a grid of fixed time slots as codes consisting of letters, numbers and hexadecimal digits.[1] Separate patterns have independent timelines; a complete song consists of a master list of repeated patterns. Later trackers departed from solely using module files, adding other options both to the sound synthesis (hosting generic synthesizers and effects or MIDI output) and to the sequencing (MIDI input and recording), effectively becoming general purpose sequencers with a different user interface. Music trackers like DefleMask and Famitracker are commonly used to make chiptunes. 1987: origins on the Amiga The term tracker derives from Ultimate Soundtracker; the first tracker software.[2] Ultimate Soundtracker was written by Karsten Obarski and released in 1987 by EAS Computer Technik for the Commodore Amiga.[3] Ultimate Soundtracker was a commercial product, but soon shareware clones such as NoiseTracker appeared as well. The general concept of step-sequencing samples numerically, as used in trackers, is also found in the Fairlight CMI sampling workstation of the early 1980s. Some early tracker-like programs appeared for the MSX (Yamaha CX5M) and Commodore 64, before 1987, such as Sound Monitor, but these did not feature sample playback, instead playing notes on the computer's internal synthesizer. Later, in Rock Monitor 3 and 4 they implemented sample player, usually with short drum samples loaded in RAM memory. The first trackers supported four pitch and volume modulated channels of 8-bit PCM samples, a limitation derived from the Amiga's Paula audio chipset and the commonplace 8SVX format used to store sampled sound. However, since the notes were samples, the limitation was less important than those of synthesizing music chips.