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Netpoet
Interview
`n. .rP' `qb ,dP' TLb. ,dMP' all rite, now you get the chance to read TML.dMMP some facts about some of the major amiga ,nmm`XXMPX musicians. read about their history in ,#MP'~~XNXYNXTb. the scene and their plans in future.yes, ,d~' dNNP `YNTb. that's meant to be read while listening to ,~ ,NN' `YNb their modules. read 'em over and over and over.. dNP `Yb. ,NN' `b. · i n t e r v i e w · ___________ ______dP _____________ \ / \ ,N'\____ _____________. _____ \ \_____. ____\ / \___P___/ .\--\__ __/__ |--\____)---\ _____/__ |--\_ \ _/ | | | \ | | \__| | _ \ / | \__| | /\ | | _| | | _l_ | | \ / _l_ | ___| l___/=l___|====l____/===\______|==l______|\ /l___/===\______l____/ \/ Handle: Netpoet Group: Park Date of birth: June 4th 1977 With a father working at IBM, my first contact with computers had to be really early. If you think the ATARI 2600 with pac-man, Dig dug and such doesn't count for "computer", then it was in 1983 when a friend of mine and I were sitting in front of an Olivetti PC trying to play King's Quest 1. I was six years old at that time and didn't speak ANY English. I wonder how the figured out that "open door" stuff. ;) The first one was an ATARI 2600. I just played with it. Hell, I was around THREE. :) The next computer was a C64. Again I just played with it. Some of the games my sister and I played until we dropped dead (I remember the Bubble Bobble times very clearly ;)). That was really cool. The third one was already a PC. It might sound strange, but think of it. My dad worked at IBM, so little Franky was getting a PC, no questions asked. :) PCs grew bigger and faster. You know the development. When I was around 12 or 13, my uncle got me a Roland CM32-L soundcard from the states. We had to import it because my IBM PC was a microchannel one, and the industry never really got to producing for microchannel. So this year (must have been around 1989-90) I started making music with the PC. First there was an Adlib card, then the Roland CM32-L, after that Soundblasters came. A friend of mine showed me Fasttracker 2.03 at that time, and I knew that this was what I had always wanted. The rest was more an affair of PCs growing faster. Programs became more complex, possibilities grew big time. I think it wasn't me choosing music. I think music chose me. It's the media I express myself with. Music has always been with me. I became calm and aggressive, sad and happy with auditive things. So music just had to be it. FT2. Most definitely. I don't even remember the name of the program I used when I had this Adlib card. I DO know that the program that came with my Roland card was called "Trax", and it was a MIDI sequencer on a very basic level. I only had 128 instruments that MIDI gave me. With no other synthesizers, this was what was left for me. Especially the base drums sucked. :) With FT2 everything became different. I started thinking and working with tracker manners instead of MIDI matters. I must have used FT2 for over around 8 years when at christmas 2000 my parents gave me this great gift: a Korg Trinity V3. Since then FT2 became less and less useful, and I started switching to buzz. This is basically what I express myself with, apart from the Trinity, of course. But FT2 was definitely the program I worked with the longest, if you don't count operating systems. Not even the Lucasfilm game "Maniac Mansion" got it so far. :) None. It's always a matter of working, learning, producing, improving. I never release a song I'm not content with (okay, let's not count this "provoke" tune that wasn't meant seriously. I didn't even remember its name when some time I was told somebody liked it a lot). Still every song has a different message, and sometimes I'm more content with the sound, sometimes more with the story I tell with it. No, there is no tune like that. There have been some really bad tunes in the past, but they're at least good for a great laugh with your friends when you got drunk already. :) Music isn't everything, but demos without music are nothing. Yes, I'm still composing for my crew Park for fun. I don't know if there will ever be professional and commercial projects. I think I'd love to make music for money, but the music would be way different, I guess. But that's all totally unknown territory really to me. Errrmmm, well...apart from midi which is more a media to make music these are all just streaming formats. to be honest, i didn't have any idea you could stream music only with mpg-files, but wave (and all other streaming formats) are basically just a form of data for a stream and don't really represent a style of making music. So I think they're useful. :) Probably everybody writes it here, but i have to mention it, too. There have been so many great tunes that it would take way too long to list them all. Being asked this question I can only list a couple of tunes I remember that helped me a lot in certain situations. Falcon - Leeloo If I died tonight, I'd want this song to be played at my funeral. I am NOT joking. Le Petit Prince Nicollete Velvet & A-Move - Fluffy Clouds Sojourner Wave - Pools of poison I can't talk about that yet. :) The Avalanches, Yonderboi, BT, St Germain, Pe Werner, George Michael, Eric Gadd, Aphex Twin, As somebody who's never had an Amiga, the only point of the Amiga scene that could possibly reach me was a totally idiotic guy in 5th grade who always showed up with the games his brother who seemed to have contact to the Amiga trader scene brought along. With the C64 scene, I had no real contact. The only things I saw were the cool cracktros. :) Yes, I'm "still" working for several projects, may it be music or demo projects. My law studies take a lot of time, so I can't always compose the way I want to, but as I mentioned earlier, music has always been with me, and sometimes I just need to get back to working with it. Of course I want to greet my Park people, everybody I've coop'ed with, my friends from IRCnet and everybody who's been nice to me. :) The rest of my ideas is more a general question I sometimes ask myself. I wonder if there are still young people learning how to track. Some time ago I wanted to make a big tracking tutorial to prevent tracker music from being forgotten. Too bad I don't run an operating system FT2 runs on any more. :) People, keep on making music you love! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- please note: this interview is ©opyrighted in 2002 by crown of cryptoburners ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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