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1979-12-31
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~~2Digital Music Administration. 15 Hollycombe Close, Liphook, Hants. GU30 7HR
~~2England.
Every fortnight in this section we will be concentrating on the audio side
of computing. That is, music-modules, sampling software, sampling hardware,
module players, etc. Also techniques that can be employed when writing your
own sound modules.
----
~~6Software/hardware name : Master Sound
~~6Software house : Microdeal
~~6Price : £29.99
If you own an Atari ST and wish to sample sounds, this package is
definitely worth a look.
As explained last issue with the review of Technosound Turbo, a sampler is
a means by which you can record sounds from a hi-fi or walkman onto your
computer and then play it back, or save it, or even load others in for
playback.
The hardware given with this package is a slim but long cartridge which
fits into the cartridge slot on your computer. The device simply has a
3.5mm jack input, the usual size for headphone outputs on most hi-fi's and
walkmans. There is no lead given away with this package, however.
The software is supplied on one disk.
The Display
-----------
When the software has finished loading, you are presented with the main
editing screen of Master Sound. As is usual with sample editing software, a
large portion of the upper part of the screen is devoted to the sample
display window, where the current sample waveform is displayed, (just a
blank, straight, horizontal line if there is no waveform currently in
memory).
The rest of the screen is taken up with a panel of buttons or icons. But a
fairly large space is given up to an 'oscilloscope' display on the right
hand side of the panel.
Facts, Features and Figures
---------------------------
Master Sound can sample at 5, 7.5, 10, 15 and 20Khz
There is a real-time oscilloscope available to you, so that input levels
may be adjusted before recording.
There are a number of useful effects/functions for the user. These are,
volume up (amplification by 10%), compress sample (doubles the frequency of
the sample, it then takes up half the memory), filter (low-pass), copy,
overlay (superimpose one sample on top of another), wipe, cut, reverse
sample and fade in/out.
As with Technosound Turbo, a limited sequencer is provided. The user may
assign various different samples to the keys on the numeric keypad. Then a
'song' may be built up in real-time by pressing the relevant keys while the
computer records your keypresses. Then you may play back your sequence.
High Points
-----------
The hardware is amazing for the price. Samples of acceptable quality can be
achieved at such a low cost.
The manual is very easy to understand, as long as the user reads it through
from the start. It even provides details on how to make your own demo disk
using samples and sequences produced with Master Sound along with your own
pictures, etc.
Low Points
----------
The editor, like Technosound, provides the user with a number of icons at
the bottom of the screen, showing all the functions available to you. But,
sometimes, icons can seem confusing. You can spend a while searching for
the little picture that represents the function that you want. Pull-down
menus are sometimes easier for the beginner to look at, with all the
complex functions tucked away in menus and just the simple ones, such as
Play, Zoom, etc, in a panel at the bottom of the screen.
The zoom function is really not too good. The user selects the part of the
waveform that they want to zoom by positioning the cursors and then
clicking the mouse on the magnify button/icon. The display is then zoomed
so that the section of the waveform in-between the cursors fills the whole
of the sample edit window. But, unfortunately, the user is only allowed to
magnify once. Multiple magnifications are not available.
When a sample is loaded, the last one is not cleared from memory, so you
can sometimes have part of a previous sample left at the end of a sample
you have just loaded in. Also when you load a sample, it is loaded so that
it fits inside the cursors on the screen, but, if the space between the
cursors is less than the size of the sample, only a partial amount of the
sample will be loaded.
----
Overall, Master Sound is very good quality for the price. The editor is not
quite as good as it could have been but, for someone who isn't used to
sample editors, or hasn't used one before, it won't take long before they
become accustomed to it. The hardware is exceptional value for money and
good quality samples can be achieved with very little background noise,
even with the ST's limited sound chip capabilities.
==-----==
~~5 MODULES
-------
This issue of Digital Disk contains a couple of modules for this Digital
Music section, as detailed below.
This is to be a regular feature of the Digital Music section. So we want
your input. Please send us any 'tracker' modules that you have written and
if they are good enough, you should see them in this section of the
magazine. The best one each issue will be used for the menu-selection music
of digital disk, and the author's name will be shown here in this section.
This issue's modules are:
~~2MODULE NAME: Unknown-Artefact
~~3AUTHOR : [cb1am1]
~~2MODULE NAME: Android-Life
~~3AUTHOR : [cb1am1]
These modules should work with most, (if not all), trackers such as
Protracker, Noisetracker, etc.
Please send your modules to the address at the top of the page and always
remember to quote your user id in any correspondence to us.
~~5 *******************************************************************
~~5 * PC USERS. DON'T WORRY. THERE WILL BE A REVIEW OF SAMPLE EDITORS *
~~5 * AND TRACKERS WITHIN THE NEXT FEW MONTHS FOR THE IBM. *
~~5 *******************************************************************