WHATS SOMTHIN THATS SIMILAR TO THE MTVMG

Started by mrrap4food, February 05, 2008, 02:19:54 PM

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mrrap4food

im trying find a software thats almost similar to The Generator Via P.C.
where there isnt to much of a Learning curve

anything but fruity Loops! i cant stand that

Im kinda interested in Kenetic, but wats you guys thoughts?

trance-man

dont look to the left
dont look to the right
just follow that sraight old line

Unforgotten Village Idiot

#2
hmmm....
I am The Unforgotten.

ImL

Cakewalk.  and Buzz Machines, dumb name but there we have it.
none are as user-friendly as the Music series tho.
would love to get used to fruityloops, but every time i start it up, my brain freezes lol

DJ_Omnimaga

same here, i am more comfortable with Music 2000 PS1

RyceBeetz

Yeah i like my MTVMG2 for PS2...

i too froze when i looked at fruity loops...hahaha....and i thought creating your own riffs on PS2 was hard!! but i wouldn't mind learning FL either...

DJ_Omnimaga

With MTVMG2 it can take a bit to get used to too when you are used to horizontal scrolling and controls from Music 2000, but otherwise it goes as fast as music 2000. Now I use MTVMG2 instead of Music 2000 and I can still make better songs in the same amount of time I did with Music 2000 (4-6 hours a song) even only after 2 weeks of use)

zapphnath

Although you're not likely to find anything with the ease-of-use and usability of the Generator, there are plenty of audio sequencing applications out there.  I know because I've spent a lot of time looking for something, myself.

Besides the above-mentioned Fruity Loops, here are a couple of other pay-to-play apps:
--Cakewalk Sonar - http://www.cakewalk.com/Products/HomeStudio/default.asp - like FL, it's a bit on the difficult side but has many capabilities.
--Tracktion 3 - http://www.mackie.com/products/tracktion3/ - more simplistic than most $200 apps, which makes it easier to use, but also fully featured.

On the Freeware side, you'll find apps with less features than their expensive counterparts, though they still may not be as easy to use as (nor as pretty looking as) the Generator.
--Anvil - http://www.anvilstudio.com/ - with MIDI samples, it's nearly unlimited, but you can only work with a single, one-minute long, imported sample.  There's a $19 optional plug-in that will allow you to work with up to 8, sixty-minute long imported samples, though.
--MODplug - http://pweb.jps.net/~olivierl/ - ugly as hell but lots of features (for a free app).
--OpenSebJ - http://www.evolvingsoftware.com/ -  again, ugly as hell, but some parts of it work in a (fairly) similar fashion to the Generator.

Well, those are all I know of, offhand.  If I find any more, I'll update this list.
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147 crew

Sweet, have to check out those programmes. Heard a tune from Youtube using reason 4.0..BASS Sample was awesome, would love to have some of that in MUSIC2000

DJ_Omnimaga

you can always burn wav samples on CD and import them into Music 2000. However, sound memory is limited so for this I would either recommend MTVMG2 or Music 3000 (the later is less limited in memory terms but sound reverb is shit compared to MTVMG2, it's even worse than the PC version of Music 2000/02)