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Music Used:Space Town - What Happened to Chiptune themeBoaconstructor - Ditch The BiscuitReference:- Nanoloop - https://www.nanoloop.com/- Ovenrake - https://ovenrake.bandcamp.com/- Live Animals - https://weareliveanimals.bandcamp.com/- Glooms/Turtlesaur - [https://gloomsmusic.bandcamp.com](https://gloomsmusic.bandcamp.com/)- Electric Children/Circles - https://electricchildren8bit.bandcamp.com/- Fighter X - https://fighterx.bandcamp.com/- Piko Piko Detroit - https://pikopikodetroit.bandcamp.com/- 8bitcollective - https://archive.org/details/Best_of_8_Bit_Collective-2006-2011- TheBaseBit Recordings - https://thebasebitrecs.bandcamp.com/- Pacific Noise Works - https://pacificnoiseworks.com/- Square Sounds - https://www.squaresoundsfestival.com/- Milano Chiptune Underground - https://www.facebook.com/MilanoChiptuneUnderground/
Gameboy Advance w/ Nanoloop 2.8.2 Composed for the weeklybeats challenge - Week 08 2022 Creative Commons Copyright All rights reserved
TECHNO - DEEP & DUB TECHNO CTAFAD | Chinese Dj/Producer based in Osaka, Japan. SC: @sulumi IG: www.instagram.com/sulumi/ FB: www.facebook.com/ctafad BC: https://sundawei.bandcamp.com/ YT: www.youtube.com/channel/UC440DpdUWki3CH4nPgU03sg WWW: www.sundawei-music.com/ Sun Dawei aka CTAFAD. Electronic musician, guitarist, he is a very active Chinese composer. He started learning to play guitar at the age of fourteen and then set up a punk band, which became the catalyst for him to open the music gate. Settled in Beijing in 1999, then began the research and creation, electronic music and punk band legend in China "underground baby" as the band music arranger and guitarist, at the same time began to dabble in Fashion Show, movies, drama and jingles.For the first time in 2003 in China's famous record company in the name Of Sulumi "modern sky" albums "Air Inhibition Of Water", this is his first formal experimental electronic music show, the original technique to build a new music, present a different way to express the heart. In the same period, he also created the personal music label "Shanshui Records", and published dozens of electronic music Records in 10 years. Together with many domestic and foreign electronic musicians, the independence and music parallelism, promote the Chinese electronic music revolution. In the next few years, I began to explore the Chiptune style. Using Game Boy and Nanoloop music software, it is known as "China's 8bit first person" and its music is deeply popular. In 2008, he was invited to the "Blip Festival", the world's largest electronic music festival in New York. In the meantime, the music of this period is more mature and shows the spirit of Chiptune music. After that, people from all circles are attracted to it.The publication of "The Heaven" has made his personal music career leap.He has made a series of Remix works, including the Brain Failure, New Pants, The Gar, EeL, Jeans Team, Snoop Lion, Kid606 and Zaliva-d. In all Remix works, he has his own unique style. In 2013, Shanshui Records was reorganized, based on Ambient music and the minimalist Techno style. Integrated with rock attitude, world view and modern consciousness, the melody is transformed into a melody, abstracting consciousness and hiding the pursuit. He then moved to Japan and released his new album "Unconsciousness" by VICE CHINA in 2015. Bring new sound concepts and melodies -- more and more steady rhythm and dark line of melody line, always around the rock core stealthily, music melody avoids joy and sorrow. Unbiased, moving in time. Around the album tour held in several cities in China, he put his signature style to the new dimension of performance and deep inside the body sound in the dark with the light, guide you to return to the real world. After several metamorphoses, to explore different Spaces. He announced the new musician plan - CTAFAD.In music, you can hear "there's not a lot of modified original timbre, like atmospheric pressure, ambitious ultrasound experiments. Finally, an epic core sound field is carefully polished. The rhythm and the bass line from the beginning is proficient in the interaction, gradually unfolded and never went out. Thanks for listening and sharing! > 1. IORI - Cycle 1 2. BLNDR - Fiction 3. Alex.Do - Lumen 4. Andrea Cossu - Atlàntida Dos 5. Feral - L'Aube Rouge 6. Anthony Linell - The States of Luminosity 7. Joachim Spieth - Luciferin 8. Luigi Tozzi - Ambrosia 9. Blazej Malinowski - State Of Conscious 10. Anthony Linell - Find Your Center 11. ALPI & Essē - Thoughts Create Reality 12. a n j e - Lights Orbit Around a Black Hole 13. Acronym & Korridor - Untitled 14. Sun Dawei - Rì Yuè Bù Jū
Joe flies solo and plays some smashing tunes again
SPOKEN WORD WITH ELECTRONICS #34: Making Music with 2600 Hz Tones and Firmware Audio Update Files Number-based trivia: 2600, the hacker quarterly, is named after this 2600 hertz tone, which is a single tone that can override a payphone's pricing controls with one single command. Hi everyone, welcome back to the show. This week is about loud noises made by computers. Awful sounds like modems, faxes, and my favorite unbearable noise: The firmware update file. Firmware can be updated via an audio file and to demonstrate this, we discuss audio files from Korg's Monotribe, the W-slash sampler from Whimsical Raps, and Nanoloop. I thought it would be fun to make comforting music from these noises, and you can jump to "The Roomba is Dreaming" to hear the end result. The discussion for this week is a demonstration of using envelope generators to smooth out the harsh tones of a firmware file. In particular, a trapezoid generator based on an EMS Synthi is used to pull out tonal rhythms. Last week's Boing Boing post on "Booting DOS from vinyl" reminded me of cassette drive loading. We had an Atari 400 and an 800, and both of those used cassettes to load many of their games. I used to love that noise, and I expect Atari filtered the sound of the cassettes themselves, otherwise risk injuring the ears of kids who put the cassettes (intended for a computer) into their walkman (it would still play, after all). So you'll learn about Zaxxon, Frogger, and my favorite Atari cassette-based game: Salmon Run. All of these sound files work to load data because a lot can be communicated in a tone. If you think about a phone dialer, it is twelve separate pitched notes (0-9, pound and asterix) – These tones are used for any number of aggravating automated systems when you call customer service lines, and they also connect your call. There are a few tones never intended for you to hear, however, including the 2600 hertz tone, which was a tone generated by a payphone when a call was concluded. Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak unofficially began Apple Computers with a phone phreaking device called the Blue Box. It was a device that sent out a 2600 hertz tone to fake (or phake) the sound of a phone getting disconnected. The two callers would remain on the phone, however, allowing a free call without billing. So in our introduction this week I demonstrate the 2600 hertz tone using a wonderful iphone app called Phonal Tonal, which replicates a Blue Box, Green Box, and a Red Box.
SPOKEN WORD WITH ELECTRONICS #34: Making Music with 2600 Hz Tones and Firmware Audio Update Files Number-based trivia: 2600, the hacker quarterly, is named after this 2600 hertz tone, which is a single tone that can override a payphone's pricing controls with one single command. Hi everyone, welcome back to the show. This week is about loud noises made by computers. Awful sounds like modems, faxes, and my favorite unbearable noise: The firmware update file. Firmware can be updated via an audio file and to demonstrate this, we discuss audio files from Korg's Monotribe, the W-slash sampler from Whimsical Raps, and Nanoloop. I thought it would be fun to make comforting music from these noises, and you can jump to "The Roomba is Dreaming" to hear the end result. The discussion for this week is a demonstration of using envelope generators to smooth out the harsh tones of a firmware file. In particular, a trapezoid generator based on an EMS Synthi is used to pull out tonal rhythms. Last week's Boing Boing post on "Booting DOS from vinyl" reminded me of cassette drive loading. We had an Atari 400 and an 800, and both of those used cassettes to load many of their games. I used to love that noise, and I expect Atari filtered the sound of the cassettes themselves, otherwise risk injuring the ears of kids who put the cassettes (intended for a computer) into their walkman (it would still play, after all). So you'll learn about Zaxxon, Frogger, and my favorite Atari cassette-based game: Salmon Run. All of these sound files work to load data because a lot can be communicated in a tone. If you think about a phone dialer, it is twelve separate pitched notes (0-9, pound and asterix) – These tones are used for any number of aggravating automated systems when you call customer service lines, and they also connect your call. There are a few tones never intended for you to hear, however, including the 2600 hertz tone, which was a tone generated by a payphone when a call was concluded. Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak unofficially began Apple Computers with a phone phreaking device called the Blue Box. It was a device that sent out a 2600 hertz tone to fake (or phake) the sound of a phone getting disconnected. The two callers would remain on the phone, however, allowing a free call without billing. So in our introduction this week I demonstrate the 2600 hertz tone using a wonderful iphone app called Phonal Tonal, which replicates a Blue Box, Green Box, and a Red Box.
Episode 31, Discussion, "A Nanoloop Arrived on Election Day." by Spoken Word with Electronics
Episode 31, Side A: "Nanoloop Hardware Demo" (All Factory Sounds, No External Effects) by Spoken Word with Electronics
Hi , everyone. Welcome back to the show. This week, a Nanoloop arrived from Germany. I was elated. It showed up with great timing, too, on the afternoon of the day of the Election. Not sure it's possible to describe how stressful that day felt, though I imagine it's relatable. A drum machine synthesizer that is built off of the sounds of classic Nintendo Gameboy circuitry was just what the doctor ordered, so I turned off the news (to the best of my ability, anyway) and recorded Nanoloop beats for a week. You'll find that mood journal here for Side A. The Nanoloop itself is a legendary component of chiptune music, and other electronic formats, providing instant acid house-esque rhythms. It's really wonderful for sound design, too. It's four concurrent 16-step grids, four voices, and is played like a video game. You'll hear Nanoloop on some recordings you love, from Aphex Twin to Boards of Canada, and elsewhere. A discussion on that is included. The Nanoloop began as a cartridge for the original Nintendo Gameboy. It was then made for the Nintendo DS, ported to a deliriously fun iphone app, among other history. All of these iterations beg the question: "Why make a dedicated piece of hardware?" The answer is hardware is physical (obviously), electrically more musical (each note is a synapse), and has unpredictability you can't find in software. I've spent a week with the Nanoloop hardware and already find myself more drawn to play it than any of the software versions, cartridge included. This is a great successful achievement for Wittchow, who successfully launched a Kickstarter to realize Nanoloop as hardware in February 2019. The serendipity of the Nanoloop arriving unexpectedly as it did was all the more nice, as I'd paid for it in March 2019. Kickstarter campaigns can be a little like messages in the bottle in that way, and the arrival of this gear on that stressful day is something I'm very thankful for. The original price of the Nanoloop was $100, which gives you a very capable PCB, buttons and a lucite clear faceplate. I might spend a little to build a custom metal or wood case around it, as I expect to use this for many years to come. (I expect that original price to increase if there's a second run of these made, too, and wouldn't fault them for it.) Oliver Wittchow, the inventor of the Nanoloop, also makes one of my favorite phone games, the self-described Hungry Ducks, which just involves throwing bread out in the water and watching ducks scurry to eat. Have a nice terror-free week. Trump is on the way out. Relief! - Ethan
Hi , everyone. Welcome back to the show. This week, a Nanoloop arrived from Germany. I was elated. It showed up with great timing, too, on the afternoon of the day of the Election. Not sure it's possible to describe how stressful that day felt, though I imagine it's relatable. A drum machine synthesizer that is built off of the sounds of classic Nintendo Gameboy circuitry was just what the doctor ordered, so I turned off the news (to the best of my ability, anyway) and recorded Nanoloop beats for a week. You'll find that mood journal here for Side A. The Nanoloop itself is a legendary component of chiptune music, and other electronic formats, providing instant acid house-esque rhythms. It's really wonderful for sound design, too. It's four concurrent 16-step grids, four voices, and is played like a video game. You'll hear Nanoloop on some recordings you love, from Aphex Twin to Boards of Canada, and elsewhere. A discussion on that is included. The Nanoloop began as a cartridge for the original Nintendo Gameboy. It was then made for the Nintendo DS, ported to a deliriously fun iphone app, among other history. All of these iterations beg the question: "Why make a dedicated piece of hardware?" The answer is hardware is physical (obviously), electrically more musical (each note is a synapse), and has unpredictability you can't find in software. I've spent a week with the Nanoloop hardware and already find myself more drawn to play it than any of the software versions, cartridge included. This is a great successful achievement for Wittchow, who successfully launched a Kickstarter to realize Nanoloop as hardware in February 2019. The serendipity of the Nanoloop arriving unexpectedly as it did was all the more nice, as I'd paid for it in March 2019. Kickstarter campaigns can be a little like messages in the bottle in that way, and the arrival of this gear on that stressful day is something I'm very thankful for. The original price of the Nanoloop was $100, which gives you a very capable PCB, buttons and a lucite clear faceplate. I might spend a little to build a custom metal or wood case around it, as I expect to use this for many years to come. (I expect that original price to increase if there's a second run of these made, too, and wouldn't fault them for it.) Oliver Wittchow, the inventor of the Nanoloop, also makes one of my favorite phone games, the self-described Hungry Ducks, which just involves throwing bread out in the water and watching ducks scurry to eat. Have a nice terror-free week. Trump is on the way out. Relief! - Ethan
Episode 31, Discussion, "A Nanoloop Arrived on Election Day." by Spoken Word with Electronics
Episode 31, Side A: "Nanoloop Hardware Demo" (All Factory Sounds, No External Effects) by Spoken Word with Electronics
The last part in our prelude to the start of the next console generation by talking Nintendo and what they got for the next gen. Our guest of honor Jen returns from the infamous Star Wars episode to help weigh in on what smash characters we want to see next and beyond. Let the games begin. New Intro!: Nanoloop by @henryhomesweet ------- Search "Gaming Blues Podcast" and subscribe to listen to our latest episodes Follow us on our social media! @LastBlues | @GamingPilgrim | Art: @virizeart Follow us on Twitch! twitch.tv/LastBlues | twitch.tv/TheGamingPilgrimage
Only a few more weeks to until next gen begins...now it's time to address Sony's biggest obstacle; Xbox Series X/S. Can their new strategy work out this console generation? The duo weigh in. ------- New Intro!: Nanoloop by @henryhomesweet ------- Search "Gaming Blues Podcast" and subscribe to listen to our latest episodes Follow us on our social media! @LastBlues | @GamingPilgrim | Art: @virizeart Follow us on Twitch! twitch.tv/LastBlues | twitch.tv/TheGamingPilgrimage
We are weeks away from the start of the 9th Console Wars and we are dissecting what each faction(?) is doing to prep for the war! This episode, we are talking all about Sony and their glorious warship router that is the Phrash Speed 5. ------- New Intro!: Nanoloop by @henryhomesweet ------- Search "Gaming Blues Podcast" and subscribe to listen to our latest episodes Follow us on our social media! @LastBlues | @GamingPilgrim | Art: @virizeart Follow us on Twitch! twitch.tv/LastBlues | twitch.tv/TheGamingPilgrimage
Joe flies solo and plays some smashing tunes
Next gen is here and next gen news galore! Before we dive in, we're gonna slowly get back to our talkative mojo by discussing the update to one of our favorite games: Devil May Cry 5! ------- New Intro!: Nanoloop by @henryhomesweet ------- Search "Gaming Blues Podcast" and subscribe to listen to our latest episodes Follow us on our social media! @LastBlues | @GamingPilgrim | Art: @virizeart Follow us on Twitch! twitch.tv/LastBlues | twitch.tv/TheGamingPilgrimage
Auckland based DIY musician Modern Chair's vast discography focuses on experiments in synth-driven mind control. They provide us with a live-set created with a Eurorack and Nanoloop 2.8.2 running on Nintendo Gameboy Advance. For more, check their latest Hardcore Hog EP, label metallurgic.bandcamp.com/ or find them performing at Festival Of Modular Synths - Te Wai Ōrea/Lake of Eels held Oct 24 in AK. @modernchair
Joe is joined by James CalmDownKidder
Back again, Joe flying solo this time.
1 x GBA running NanoLoop 2.8.2 2020 Creative Commons Copyright All rights reserved
We're back, again, after a brief hiccup.
You're in the woods and approaching the forest animals discrete annual winter party and you can hear how the choppers in the sky are searching for the secret location to be able to get a glimpse of this highly rare and exclusive phenomena. Haven't shared any music here in a while so I thought I'd share this song I composed for the WeeklyBeats challenge. Composed on a GameBoy Advance using Nanoloop 2.8.2, recorded directly into soundcard and added a small pinch of reverb. Hope you'll enjoy :) 2020 Creative Commons Copyright All rights reserved
We're back, only six weeks this time!
In today's tech and gaming news we talked about: -The Analogue Pocket. A Gameboy Pocket lookalike that uses 2 FPGAs that allows you to play Game Boy, GBC, and GBA games natively without emulation. It also has a digital audio workstation called Nanoloop built in! - Pixel 4 Face Unlock Security risks. The Pixel 4 face unlock feature works even without your prompting and without you even needing to open your eyes. Yikes! Don't let someone you don't trust around your new Pixel 4. -Studio Ghibli's entire library is coming to HBO Max. But is it too expensive to even be worth it? -nVidia Shield TV Pro leaked. Dolby Vision HDR, Dolby Atmos, 3GB of RAM, 16GB of internal storage, 2xUSB 3.0 ports for storage and more. Launching October 28th for $199. --------------- Sources: Pixel 4 Face Unlock: https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/17/20919390/google-pixel-4-face-unlock-eyes-closed-privacy-eye-contact Google Support Page Pixel 4: https://support.google.com/pixelphone/answer/9517039?hl=en Analogue Pocket: https://www.analogue.co/pocket/ nVidia Shield TV Pro: https://twitter.com/androidtv_rumor/status/1184847460109312000?s=19) nVidia Shield TV Pro: https://www.androidcentral.com/nvidias-upcoming-and-unannounced-shield-refresh-goes-live-early-amazon nVidia Shield TV Pro: https://9to5google.com/2019/10/17/nvidia-shield-tv-pro-amazon/ Studio Ghibli: https://www.theverge.com/2019/10/17/20919325/studio-ghibli-stream-hbo-max-spirited-away-kikis-delivery-service-my-neighbor-totoro Nintendo Switch Sale: https://www.amazon.com/Nintendo-Switch-Neon-Blue-Red-Joy%E2%80%91/dp/B07VGRJDFY/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=nintendo+switch&qid=1571355978&s=videogames&sr=1-3 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mega-drop/support
We're back again, first episode of 2019!
Shelby Cinca is celebrating the 10-year anniversary of Swedish Columbia Records with the release of a 24 track compilation album entitled Slow Blade. Strongly believing that the slow blade penetrates the shield, which has more than resonated in Shelby journey to this point, the label continues to thrust of forward will still paying homage to its roots and influences. First tearing his way on to the music scene with the post-hardcore / math rock group Frodus, Cinca would stumble upon a and nanoloop compilation in the early 2000s that would shift his artistic direction. What began as a tour bus pass time of making music with Gameboy sounds, it would begin to break through with Shelby finding himself in the Myspace / Blog house movement before it's twilight. From their Swedish Columbia would continue as a connection of like minded individuals between D.C. and Sweden, exploring and expanding into new territories eventually penetrating its way into a new realms with connections to the cult classic video game Hotline Miami and its sequel. Swedish Colombia's releases are more than audio homages to the sounds of the 80s and video game soundtracks, as the label tries to create a connection with more than just a playable product with their physical releases, adding depth through retro-styled cases, elaborate artwork, and even board games. Shelby Cinca joins me on the DTP to discuss finding that nanoloop tape in Germany, his transition to electronic music, Dune, wrestling, and 10 years of Swedish Columbia Records!
All the most interesting music technology news from the last month including Thomann Synth Reactor, SP-2400, RolandCloud TB-303, Deton8, Parallels, Doepfer polyphonic, Equinox, Dubler Studio Kit, Nanoloop, Moogfest, SPICE and Thunderbolt.Read More → The post Molten Music Monthly – March 2019 appeared first on Molten Music Technology Blog.
Minimal techno chiptune made with: 1 x GBA w/ Nanoloop 2.7.6 2020 Creative Commons Copyright All rights reserved
been a few months since i last picked up my 1.3 as ive been using mono so i made a mini jam as im still not ready to clear my 1.3 banks so yeah nothing major thrashy just a mini jam 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
Nanoloop mono + some effects + volca bass jam / improvisation. I know it's too long and too monotonous, but I like the mood. If somebody know how this kind of music is called, I'd be glad to hear some thing of the same genre. 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
composed with a DMG running through a KAM 2 channel mixer and a copy of Nanoloop 1.5 demo rom flashed to a ems cart 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
track was recorded with audacity, made using 2x DMG gameboy prosound using Nanoloop 1.3 for main tracks and LSDJ for samples and occasional super mario for the inbetween parts lol (i own a very buggy LSDJ cart that kept crashing) both gameboys are mixed using a KAM KMX100 mixer 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
This isn't a real song, I'm trying out GB303 and Nanoloop Mono. Although they've both been out for quite some time, this is my first experience using them. Plus haven't uploaded anything in a while. so here's 10 minutes of confound it noise. 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
Part 1 of the "_Lo-Tech" series. improvised on Nanoloop 2 with every loop being triggered and edited manually on the fly. 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
Messing around with the Nanoloop 2.0.1 demo rom. 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
made entirely on nanoloop 1.7 using gameboy dmg01, thqnx to Oliver Wittchow for such an amazing piece of art. (Nanoloopbandit EP coming soon!!!) 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
Our first audiocast is a nice byte-sized introduction to Chiptune Tech. Chiptune Tech is here to provide information on chiptune hardware, mods, accessories and innovations being brought to the world of chiptune music. We will be delving into the mechanics of LSDj and Nanoloop in future episodes. With you, the listener, we are interested to hear what topics you would like for us to discuss, so please let us know via email at mikee@ohmnohmnohm.com. Anthony starts our first episode talking about the difference between DMG-01 CPUs and how to choose the right one for making music with.
Made entirely nanoloop 1.7 using gameboy DMG 01 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
made entirely on nanoloop 1.7 (many thanx to Oliver Wittchow) 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
made entirely on nanoloop 1.7(thanx to Oliver Wittchow) 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
Track made on 2 x GBAs on Nanoloop 2.7 2020 Creative Commons Copyright All rights reserved
~thin ice •• moon dance Δmechanical realm ⌂please come home 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
Here's a little thing I made with Nanoloop 1.7.6. Really enjoying using nanoloop for actual songwriting, something some people claim it's not well-suited for. Working hard to proove them wrong! 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
nanoloop mono recorded on tapedeck. 1.cosmos crime 2. order in the court 3. univers(e/al) law [/dude] 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
Hi guys. I thought I'd share one of these, a track from a forthcoming project of mine called "Digital Bass 2017" It is reminiscent of the old school bass CD's, which for those that don't know, were popular in the late 80's thru the late 90's. It is instrumental electronic music with excessive loud and low digital bass with the purpose of pushing serious car audio setups nice and hard. It probably took a certain type of person to listen to that music for general listening, and I so happened to be one of those (reference the likes of Bass Mekanik, Techmaster PEB, Beat Dominator, etc.) It was done entirely with Nanoloop on iOS. Basically, if you don't have a system in your vehicle, you won't be hearing tunes like this the way they were meant to be. In the case of this tune, it is just my style and it will probably undergo a few tweaks and adjustments for being put on the retail CD release. I do occasionally work with other stuff besides just chiptune :) Hope someone can enjoy it. See ya! --BitPusher 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial Share Alike (BY-NC-SA)
A chill out show of Synthwave from Telefuture, mono Nanoloop gameboy deep chip from Nonfinite, and the new compilation from Forest Label, Chiptunes from Russia. Show ends with Earthbound Jazz from the album Psychokinetic. Tracklist - http://thisweekinchiptune.com/172 Patreon - http://patreon.com/djcutman
7x7x7 patterns in Nanoloop mono recorded directly it to my casette 4 track, than procesed live by delay and stereo chorus. 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
Nanoloop 1.7.6 demo 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
My first 6 petterns 2xr - 2xc - 2xn in Nanoloop Mono. Thanks Ondrej from Bastl instruments for lending me his cart. 2020 Creative Commons CC Attribution Noncommercial No Derivative Works (BY-NC-ND)
A chill episode, Super Nintendo inspired music from Bknapp and Shnabubula, deep Nanoloop house from Cheapshot, tracks from DDRKirby(ISQ) and Nitro Pulse, and the new compilation from Pterodactyl Squad! Support this show! http://www.Patreon.com/DjCutman Full Tracklist and Download Links! http://www.ThisWeekinChiptune.com/112
MB Plays: Gameboy DMG-1, nanoloop, gameboy camera, various filters, tape echo. Dedicated to Moushu.
Our featured artist this time is Bitmuch!http://milkcrate.com.au/silreq/8bcopenmic/8bcopenmic_episode4.mp3for more info on her goto:http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/bitmuch/also:http://myspace.com/mmmmarciamore from bitmuch at:http://shedcore.com/also check out her ska/reggae/dub band "the skints" at:http://myspace.com/theskintsukToday we have our first female chip-musician to perform on the "8bc open mic podcast". Bitmuch brings us a raga chip dnb set that will get anyone out of their chair, so be careful if you are listening to this while operating heavy equipment. We begin by asking the age ol' question "How necessary are the dreads?", then violence erupts over an incident involving "Goldie", but the the rage is quelled by Bitmuch's superb set, and a little help from mother nature. So grab a spliff, tuck in, and try not to "fall off your dinosaur". . .As always we are looking for live sets, for guidelines on submitting goto:http://www.8bitcollective.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=8633and we are also looking for your intros:http://www.8bitcollective.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=9610Credits for this episode:Microchip - for introBitmuch - for live setThe Gingerbread Man - for outrosilreq - for sh*tty background music during interview and post show bullsh*t sessionAny questions, comments, hate mail, or whatever send them to eitherSILREQ:silreq / at mindspring / dot comor THE ROBOT:therobot /at mindspring /dot com-sr-
So if you listened to the last episode of the "8bc open mic podcast" then you heard Robot mentioning getting his own radio show. Essentially I told him no, and the next morning he shows up with a bunch of lawyers. . . Apparently robots have rights, and I was told that I would be sued for psychological damages and that charges would be brought for violating about 4 labor laws, and that the use of the word "t**ster" in reference to Robot's grandmother, is considered a hate crime. . . Wow . . .so Robot got his radio show, but he still has to ask ME permission to use My computer. . .podcast link:http://milkcrate.com.au/silreq/8bcopenmic/rbtmxtp/rbtmx1.mp3Robot wrote:"THIS IS MUSIC YOU SHOULD BE LISTENING TO ALREADY!IF NOTTHEN HAVE FUN BEING A LOSERDOWNLOAD - LISTEN - NOWAND REMEMBERHUMANS STOLE CHIPMUSIC FROM ROBOTSI'M OUT BITCHES"credits:waxinwary - monkyz ninja9000 - Ninja Caravan Dj Jo Quaid 5 - hazey shade of quaidJT - Clamwank2mister beep - digital worldgoferboy - Ataxic DiscoSally zero - mistMr. Spastic - Innafacesurasshu - cold freakin' coffeelinks:http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/waxinwary/http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/ninja9000/http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/DJ+Jo+Quaid+5/http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/Josstintimberlake/http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/MISTER+BEEP/http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/goferboy/http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/sally+zero/http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/mr.spastic/http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/surasshu/
Our featured artist this time is none other than "little-scale"!!!http://milkcrate.com.au/silreq/8bcopenmic/8bcopenmic_Episode3.mp3for more info on him goto:http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/little-scale/or his real website (make sure to check out the Tomczak-centric Links):http://little-scale.blogspot.com/or his vegan recipe site:http://thisisnotgourmet.blogspot.com/info on milkcrates:http://www.milkcrate.com.au/iswhat.htmla very special milkcrate (Of Daedalus):http://www.milkcrate.com.au/sessions-details-019.htmlWe are priviliged to hear an absolutely bad-ass set by little-scale, which he performed live using a GBA SP with nanoloop 2.3 and a midified Sega Megadrive (a.k.a. genesis) played with a keyboard. The episode begins with me explaining why certain chiptune artists names confuse me, then little-scale makes Robot cry. And we end the show with some superb one channel craziness. So open a jar of vegemite, grab some ticks of toast, and get ready for a real treat!!!and as always we are looking for live sets, for more info goto:http://www.8bitcollective.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=8633and we are also looking for intros:http://www.8bitcollective.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=9610Credits for episode:sally zero - for introlittle-scale - for live setChalices of the past - for outrosilreq - for sh*tty background music during interview and post show bullsh*t sessionAny questions, comments, hate mail, or whatever send them to eitherSILREQ:silreq / at mindspring / dot comor THE ROBOT:therobot /at mindspring /dot com-sr-
Our featured artist this time is "Godinpants" a.k.a. "Doginpants"http://milkcrate.com.au/silreq/8bcopenmic/8bc_open_mic_Episode_2.mp3for more info on him goto:http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/godinpants/also:http://www.godinpants.com/!!!warning!!! site above may cause dain bramage. . .This time "Godinpants" brings us an improvised nanoloop breakcoresque poodle swooning set, not to mention it was controlled and triggered using a bent toy guitar. We begin by debating the pluses and minuses of an ass-beard. Robot is a bit on the angry side because of a close encounter with a goat. . .err sheep actually, and we end the episode with some fake gabba, so have a listen and respect yer goat. . .As always we are looking for live sets, for guidelines on submitting goto:http://www.8bitcollective.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=8633and we are also looking for your intros:http://www.8bitcollective.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=9610Credits for this episode:Beware - for introGodinpants - for live setArottenbit - for outrosilreq - for sh*tty background music during interview and post show bullsh*t sessionAny questions, comments, hate mail, or whatever send them to eitherSILREQ:silreq / at mindspring / dot comor THE ROBOT:therobot /at mindspring /dot com-sr-
At last the 1st episode of the "8bc open mic" podcast is now available for download.http://milkcrate.com.au/silreq/8bcopenmic/8bc_open_mic_episode_1.mp3Our featured artist this time is "microchip" for more info on him goto:http://www.8bitcollective.com/members/microchip/also:http://www.myspace.com/microchiptunesand:http://microchip.bandcamp.mu/Now I will apologize ahead of time for us, you see when this was recorded microchip was sick, I was sick, and the robot. . .well he's just a c*ck-smoker that made things difficult as usual. . . So I apologize now for not being able to understand some of the things we are saying, a bit stuffy sounding you see.Also this show needs an intro, something 30sec to around a minute. I will leave this open to any 8bc members that wish to contribute and I will switch them as often as I get ones that I like. I would like to use a different one for each episode.I hope you enjoy this episode enough that you will send in your own live submissions.for info on submission rules and procedures goto:http://www.8bitcollective.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=8633Credits for this episode:Microchip - for the live performanceDr. Zilog - for the outro songsilreq - for sh*tty background music during interview and post show bullsh*t sessionAny questions, comments, hate mail, or whatever send them to eitherSILREQ:silreq / at mindspring / dot comor THE ROBOT:therobot /at mindspring /dot com-sr-