2020-04-02 - Space debris ------------------------------------------------------------------- I've always liked listening to tracker modules. Back somewhere in the 90's, i found myself totally in awe with hearing awesome music come out of a PC running Fasttracker2. All the things happening while the module was playing, the scopes, the tracks scrolling over the screen, the music, it was magic. By some weird fluke, i've completely missed out on the C64 and Amiga era, and the only computers i had access to were old handed-down XT machines, which were at the time much less capable in doing the 'impressive' things the homecomputers did. But somehow i've completely missed the whole homecomputer scene. I remember a friend having a C64, playing Giana Sisters. But i wasn't so impressed with it, as it seemed less cool than the NES at the time. So, by the time i saw a friend-of-a-friend's 486 computer playing some mods i was naturally very impressed. And some more years later i finally had access to a powerful enough computer to play my own modules in Fasttracker. Now the really nice thing about these .mod and .xm songs, is that they are essentially open source. These single files contain everything needed to play themselves, and when opening them in tracker software, you can see exactly how everything is made. So you can see what the samples looked like, how the instruments were made, how the patterns were build and what kind of effects were used. All of this was of course very inviting to start composing music by myself as well. So that's something i did for years. Of course when starting out, you'd simply borrow (rip) cool samples from other mods you could get your hands on via friends of friends (mind you, it was pre-internet). And you'd just mess about making stupid little songs, writing stupid little stories in the instrument lists. Nothing serious ever came from it, but you were having a good time, being creative, sitting in wonder behind your desktop, completely in bliss while watching FT2 do its magic. And after making a bunch of songs, you'd listen to more songs from others, trying to figure out how these mythical tracker musicians did things completely right. And of course, these musicians also remained mythical, as you'd only know them from the couple of small lines of info they'd put in the instrument list. Later i found out, the song i heard for the first time was Space Debris, by Markus "Captain" Kaarlonen. It's still my all time favourite song, and having heard it hundreds of times, it's pretty much completely ingrained in my system. All-in-all a magical time. And i very much enjoy still listening to mods, looking how they are made (using Milkytracker now) and making my own little stupid songs. Not for serious reasons, but just for the sake of being creative. And i find myself with the exact same sense of wonder, listening to the music and watching the patterns scroll by, nearly a quarter of a century later. [1] Space Debris by Captain: https://modarchive.org/index.php?request=view_by_moduleid&query=57925