smallerfish
7 days ago
Bitwig is my favorite software - it really is all in one music production software, and they have great support for Linux. I have used it hooked up to a room full of synths, but these days (due to space constraints) I make music with just the software (with occasionally a midi keyboard). No need for any VSTs (unless you really want to) - the built in synths and effects plugins are high quality.
(I started out using trackers in the 90s - Fast, Impulse, and eventually Buzz. I held off using DAWs for a long time because I didn't like the lack of information density that trackers are good at, but turns out I really don't miss that in Bitwig.)
Here's a couple tracks I've made with it: https://synth8.bandcamp.com/track/spring-trap, https://synth8.bandcamp.com/track/prompt
karlgrz
6 days ago
Hey I played guitar on Prompt, small world, @smallerfish!
Bitwig rules.
multjoy
6 days ago
Have you tried Renoise for your tracker fix?
rootnod3
6 days ago
Highly recommend the Dirtyave M8 [1] for a tracker fix that comes in hardware firm and is a gift that keeps in giving with increasingly good firmware updates.
multjoy
6 days ago
I have the Polyend tracker mini which is excellent, especially as they're updating in step with their desktop version.
Also slightly easier to get hold of!
mock-possum
6 days ago
I really wish there was something between Furnace and OpenMPT - where you could mix hardware-reproducible chiptune sequencing seamlessly with more modern soft synth and samplers. Renose is plenty capable, but it’s felt awkward to fiddle with when I’ve tried it - I really just need to sit down and devote a period of extended experimentation to it.
smallerfish
6 days ago
Yeah, I just never gelled with it.
user
6 days ago
Intermernet
7 days ago
Good to see another fellow past Buzz user. Seriously underrated piece of software!
smallerfish
7 days ago
Some background on Buzz for others: Buzz was a tragic case of not using version control. Apparently the author had a hard drive die, and his only copy of the source control went with it.
It had a unique routing UX (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeskola_Buzz#/media/File:BuzzS...) that allowed you to chain sources and effects using a graph. Bitwig has a similar idea in The Grid (https://www.bitwig.com/the-grid/), though that's limited to just one track; Buzz did this for the entire composition.
There was at least one rewrite attempt, and there are various clones (Aldrin) but they never quite made it.
pierrec
6 days ago
I believe the event you describe is pretty ancient, and Buzz recovered and continued development for many years after. I wrote some plugins for the more recent versions of Buzz, the plugin API was always nice to work with (compared to VST at least!)
Intermernet
6 days ago
It had a device called "amen" that did exactly what you'd expect. Pretty sure I used it on every track I made :-)
stavros
6 days ago
Sounds like a tragic case of not making backups, to me. Even if the author used a VCS, when the drive died it would have taken the repo with it all the same.
HexDecOctBin
6 days ago
Is the "routing" similar to Sunvox? https://warmplace.ru/soft/sunvox/images/t/01/01.png
whizzter
6 days ago
Actually from 2008 to 2016 there was updates, they sent off the disk to a recovery firm and got a mostly latest copy and built from that. The newer versions used .NET and the main improvment in those builds was a new pattern-system (XP-patterns) so you could make patterns that selected parameters from one or more machines.
So the annoyance of having to work in different patterns when your "instrument" was made out of a chain of discrete modules went away (also useful for making chords from primitive machines since you could hook multiple generators in one pattern).
NetOpWibby
6 days ago
> Buzz was a tragic case of not using version control. Apparently the author had a hard drive die, and his only copy of the source control went with it.
Yeah, lemme go ahead and commit this code I've been working on for weeks without creating a repo...
tomduncalf
6 days ago
Buzz was so great. I came across it when I learned James Holden produced his early stuff on it and was hooked. It had a good community with hundreds of synths and effects you could download from Buzzmachines. It was such a shame they lost the source code, I’d have loved to see how it developed.
tomduncalf
6 days ago
This made me google Buzz and it turns out it was recoded by the author and there was an update in 2022. Not sure if it’s still developed. I’m not on a Windows machine so won’t be able to try it easily unfortunately, wish it was open source so it could be ported to Mac
easyThrowaway
6 days ago
I still can believe an album like "The idiots are winning" came out from that software. And there's even a friggin' video[1] explaining how he did it!