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No Fragments Archive 10: Diskmags
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MAESTRO.DOC
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1987-04-22
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A Tutorial on
******** STOS MAESTRO ********
When I first loaded up STOS Maestro, I
was confronted with a very pleasing and
easy to use program. The selection
icons are well placed, with a unique
scrolling section. It has two small
windows on either side of the screen
(for stereo samples) that act as a
spectrum analyser for your samples when
you record using a sound cartridge.
I found that on a standard 520 ST you
can actually have up to 221266 bytes of
memory to use for your samples, unlike
other programs that gobble up vast
quantities of memory.
In the upper part of the screen is the
main sample window, where you can view
and alter the samples using the left
and right mouse buttons to place the
sliding cursors. When a sample is being
played, you can use the space bar to
stop the action of the play mode. This
is handy, as it places a ghost cursor
at the stop position, marking it for
use with the cut and paste modes. The
options you have in this mode are; Cut,
Copy, Splice, Paste, Insert, Mix,
Delete, Chop, Flip. All these are
adequate for manipulating samples and
can be enhanced by using the special
effects, provided by Maestro. These
include Echo, Reverb and many more -
giving your samples a dynamic power
over standard ones.
If you are lucky enough to have a
sampler cartridge, you can access
another screen using the Specials icon.
This enables you to view the sound on
an oscillascope (a device for measuring
sound waves). You can set up the Db
values (the loudness of the sound) and
clamp it before you sample it - this
stops you from getting distortion.
You can program all the F-Keys so that
your samples are instantly available
for you to hear at any time. The zoom
mode has only one magnification, but is
adequate for the job it has to perform.
(My zoom isn't like that! Try clipping
the section you want to magnify! - Ed.)
In the play mode, if you use the right
mouse button, another option is
presented to you. You can now play the
sample forwards, backwards and even
loop both ways.
The samples are loaded and saved as
signed SAM files. So unfortunately, the
only downfall to Maestro, as opposed to
other sample programs, is the lack of
ability to change the sample from
signed to unsigned and vice versa. This
would present a problem if you wanted
to use a sample from another format.
All in all Maestro is very user
friendly (it has to be for me!!) and is
ideally suited for using samples in
your STOS basic programs.
Colin.