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Buy renoise
Buy renoise













The tracker approach is like a step-sequencer on steroids. I stumbled upon the release video of 2.8 and I just fell for it immediately. I have been using Renoise for about a year. Looking forward to hearing other responses. Biggest thing I can say is just experiment! Renoise is very versatile and I'm learning new things about it every time I use it. I don't really have any special tips or tricks of my own, since I haven't been using Renoise for that long. They've certainly led to some very interesting sound design experiments. The native effects are also nothing short of incredible, and meta-devices are an extremely powerful tool that I haven't seen in many other applications. It's so different from your standard piano roll, but it also allows for some effects and techniques that are difficult or even impossible to do in other software. I really enjoy Renoise's tracker interface. About a year later I decided to try to get back into it, and the rest is history! When I first tried the demo, I was extremely impressed by its capabilities, but I was intimidated by its non-conventionalness so I dropped it. People should try a vertical tracker some time, it has some unique sequencing properties not present in a horizontal or hybrid DAW.Īs for me, I've only been using Renoise for a few months. I can't say I have any special tips other than the stuff that can be carried over from previous generation trackers. While there's still BPM, it's really impossible to know your true BPM because you can modify your tracker tick rate and lines per beat. It can be a real bitch to tweak this because not all of your samples or breakbeats like to play or align perfectly with the tracker's note playback.

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The only downside is that trackers have reduced note precision (Renoise has the ability to compensate that somewhat), and that the precision depends on how fast your playing it or the tick rate.

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Trackers are really easy to follow and edit. Renoise doesn't play nice with pulseaudio and ALSA though, so it's better off to use JACK2, but that's a pain in the ass because I have to switch the audio server plugins on my applications and it sometimes doesn't integrate well. It's modern, supports stereo, has nice midi and VST support, and still maintains the traditional tracker format, and it has linux support, which is what I use mostly now-a-days. I decided to carry on the tradition by using Renoise.

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I produce a lot of jungle and breakbeat hardcore, and a good portion of it back in the day was made using an Amiga machine with a tracker on it like OctaMED for sequencing and the higher-end user or Protracker for the amateur mod scene.Ī lot of jungle from the 90's was well preserved in tracker files, and I got to look at them and learn well from it.













Buy renoise