On the other hand, Genesis music is mostly synthesized (everything but the drums and some sound FX) and reproducable.
#MILKYTRACKER SOUNTRACKS NO COPYRIGTH GENERATOR#
If you want some 8bit generator plugs, free, visit SNES uses soundfonts and samples, so recreating these sounds is difficult to impossible, unless ya got access to the soundfonts. While it may have not been against the rules, it doesnt genuinely sound 8bit )
![milkytracker sountracks no copyrigth milkytracker sountracks no copyrigth](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/RrwUtzoNXpQ/maxresdefault.jpg)
The authentic 8bit sound such as in Atari completely comes from a synthesizer ***correct me if I'm wrong* I remember that MAC- a lot of people would just downsample shit. Well just by throwing stuff into a bitcrusher doesnt make it a chiptune. For more of a 16 bit sound, I'd just bitcrush my tunes a bit (google bitcrusher), and that should work well enough.Wait, so is bitcrusher not good to use on 8 bit music? Cuz I used that for the MAC 7 or whatever in december for the 8 bit competition and people kept telling me it wasn't 8-bit, even though I put it on 8. As you might have geussed, the SID chip is my favorite :).Īt 11/5/08 05:35 AM, Everlasting-Elements wrote: At 11/4/08 10:24 PM, WritersBlock wrote:Īs for 16 bit music, that's a little more complicated, and I'm not aware of anything that specifically reconstructs 16 bit music (ala the sega genesis).
#MILKYTRACKER SOUNTRACKS NO COPYRIGTH SOFTWARE#
Check out Ebay or something for SID chips or other soundcards in various consoles and use google to see if there's any software or program to make chiptune with it. Go look around google, there are enough alternatives around here. I suspose LSDJ works with Nanoloop or something i don't know. I've been looking lately at chiptune and found out that some Chiptune Artists have a descritpion on their page about how they make it. (Like the Tweakbench Series or trackers like Famitracker ) but they never sound like the real deal :). On the other hand there are always emulators and vst's and such. Which you use a real gameboy and use it's soundcard. Personally, i would suggest either going for a SID chip-sound which sounds amazing. SID chip are most known for the commodore 64. With that you can connect 2 ( or even 4 i suspose) SID chip to your computer. If your willing to spend alot of money there's always HardSid