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Ratpoison
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: Mah-Kahn (Ratpoison, back in the days until -94) Group: Twin Freaks, Groovefactor, Panic, Noice, Aurum. Date of birth: 24th of August 1975 It started in -86, but I bought my first computer in -88, a C64. Before that I had used Sinclair Spectrum, ABC 80 and Canon CX1. It started a lot with games, but for the Canon (that my father owned) there were none at the time. However there was a BASIC interpreter so I started programming for it in -87. When later I bought the C64 I used it for games and programmed quite a bit, pretty much like most people did then. Wow... Retrocomputing. OK, I had a C64. I made a lot of music and programming on that, as well as games. I later bought an IBM PC/XT in -89. I used that a lot for programming and BBS:ing. I was co-sysop on "The trench" in Stockholm for a while. I later had different PC-clones, a Sharp pocket computor (with pocket printer) and a short while an Atari ST. I was a member in AUGS/SUGA, though, so I had access to a lot of Amigas too. I tended to make music on all this equipment, but programming was a quite big thing too. I DID code, but not that much. But I did code a terminalprogram, emulating (almost) VT100 for C64. However, I am a scholar in music. I went to music school (Adolf Fredrik and later Kungsholmens musikgymnasium) for 9 years of my life. Music has been a large part of my life since before computers ever were. But when computers eventually emerged in my concience, it was the logical step to take, to start making music on them aswell. I have used almost every program under the sun for C64, but I loved working with the JCH-editor, beacause of its tracker-like interface. But most is done on the Music Assembler. It never used more than 18 rasterlines. On AMIGA I used Noicetracker. I don't really remember the different trackers I used on IBM or Atari, but they used to crash a lot ;-) I never did. Oh - a lot. "Psychofarmacid", a 4-bit sample inferno out of sync on the C64. I did a few really bad ones on Amiga aswell, as I recall... It can set the mood for the whole part of the demo. The same demopart with another piece of music might be a totally different experience. Yes. Mostly for my church. (Acoustic music). I am also currently working semi-professionally on a 25-minute piece for a multimedia show about the Creation. Hopefully released this year... Well... I wouldn't really know. But generally my feeling is that there is more a focus on the technical aspects such as formats and samples (like finding a sampled 4-bar "groove"...) than actually composing. It's my feeling that it has boiled down to more like producing and less composing these days. I can appreciate it on some level (I HAVE worked as a DJ myself), but on another level it saddens me, since it eventually limits creativity. Hard question... I loved a lot of Danko's work on both Amiga and C64. When it comes to acoustic music, there is just to much to choose from. From my own music my answer must be "Indigolevel", which was a real SID-bender, programmed in Music Assembler, together with Omen (Groovefactor). That was also the last tune I wrote for the C64. Not really. Not until now that you mentioned it ;-) A lot. I like a lot of different styles from rock to rap to Bach. Right now I listen a lot to Eva Cassidy (singer/songwriter with a wonderful voice) and Tekla Knos (Swedish punk-rock band) A lot of dreams. I was probably a better person back then. And a better composer, to some extent. No. I left for good in -94. I have been in the computer security field for some years, though, so I ocasionally bump into old friends. Greets to all old Noicers. Amazing that you are still active. Wahlis III, I still owe you for a lot of things. Decoder. The Omen. And Erik and Jon, who was there even before the C64. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- please note: this interview is ©opyrighted in 2003 by crown of cryptoburners ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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