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The reason for this song's title is the feeling it gives me, of looking up at the night sky from a barren moon, through the protective shielding of a mech. The 'Hand Painted' part is because all of the samples, including the very large ones like the snare and clap, were all done by hand. This song was created entirely in OpenMPT - including the instruments. Yes, even drew the claps and snares. Yes, it was a pain in the ass to do but the results were worth it. I tried doing a reverse cymbal but just couldn't make it sound right so I did a sort of kik-fill to go with the snare-roll. The snare doesn't sound quite right but it does sound good enough, considering it was drawn in the sample wavetable in OpenMPT. Now, if you do try composing in OpenMPT, make sure you remember to tune any melodic samples like bass, pad, lead, 303, etc. to the nearest C note or else they might not play well with other samples/instruments. When making a clap sound, make sure you add a short bit of low amplitude sine with some nose drawn onto it, then make three, four or more tornado-shapes, with the last one going down in amplitude very gradually. For the clap and snare, I looked at the waveforms of the originals and made my own versions of them - just needed the basic shape and structure. It's better to use percussive samples that you've created with other programs, but I wanted to go for a sort of hand-made feel for this one. Next time I might only hand-draw the kick drum and maybe use it as a snare and hat for a more lo-fi feel. Just wanted to show that you can make trance in OpenMPT with only hand-drawn samples. Also, when composing in OpenMPT or pretty much any tracker, it's a good idea to make sure you have a note-off after every melodic note because if not, it will keep on playing indefinitely. Of course there may be a way around it - just haven't figured that out yet; I'm still learning how to use the tracker interface.