Radium Music Editor

users.notam02.no

262 points by ofalkaed 22 days ago


drannex - 22 days ago

This is almost exactly what I've been dreaming of: a tracker with a linear composition timeline and automation/modulation effect guides.

Last year I even thought of just making my own, then got sidetracked. Hope this works as well as I dream.

Not sure how I've never come across this one before.

pvg - 22 days ago

A thread in 2015 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9493536

tenkabuto - 21 days ago

For others curious to see how it works/is used:

- Its manual (text and graphics): https://users.notam02.no/~kjetism/radium/documentation/

- A video tutorial (unofficial source): https://youtu.be/9-ttkNfVqgk?si=Xz0D_nV3Jt6fVUKO

Zambyte - 22 days ago

> Scripting in [...] Scheme

Interesting, does anyone have experience with this? How well does this work?

bane - 22 days ago

For those asking how this is different than other non-tracker DAWs, the answer is basically "this is a tracker".

For those not familiar, trackers are a type of music composition software that's been around in one form or another since maybe the mid-80s. [1]

Used very heavily in the demoscene, chiptune, and adjacent parts of game development scenes.

The power of trackers is in the workflow, which provides an incredibly fast interface for writing music compare to other interfaces like piano rolls, staves and notes, multi-track DAWs and so forth. They take a bit to get to used to, but allow you to compose basically as fast as you can type notes. This speeds up iteration in testing musical ideas substantially. The interface concept also lends itself to a very compact representation of multiple tracks allowing a composer to see what's happening elsewhere in their composition.

It can feel a lot like programming in many ways, and like you are working a level "below" almost all other composition software and closer to the music and instruments.

The format lends itself very well to compositions in 4/4 time, but most tracker software lets you change the time signature, tempo, and other things so that very complex compositions with weird rhythmic patterns are not too hard to pull off.

There are dedicated tracker software for all kinds of musical workflows: sample-based, chiptune, NES, MIDI, VST, modular synths, etc. and tracker software exists on pretty much every platform and targeting nearly every output audio device you could possibly imagine.

There are literally millions of tracked pieces of music in the world, covering an innumerable number of genres.

Best of all, most tracking software is free, or incredibly cheap, well documented with videos showing you how to do things and thousands to hundreds of thousands of examples you can open to see how a particular musician accomplished something.

1 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_tracker

2 - Here's a tracker I particularly like who works in a lot of styles, especially tracks "Living, again and again" (both mixes), "Accidental Ray of Sun (Piano Mix)", "Aurielis (lf box mix)", and "Transitory"

https://soundcloud.com/elblanco5

According to a comment, he did most of this in a tracker called "Impulse Tracker" which is now replicated for modern systems as "Schism Tracker" - a completely sample based tool.

gbraad - 22 days ago

This could be what I am looking for...

But in general use it feels slow and very unstable. I tried on Windows, as that was 'recommended'

I tried this with some of my own OctaMED files, and the experience has been ... well ... not pleasant. None of them load.

Note: I used MED, OctaMED 4, OctaMED SoundStudio, Protracker, before moving to Renoise, Reaper and Bitwig. Also used Samplitude and Sonar for a long time. Amiga user with a large collection of modules and samples I created over the decades. I like trackers and hate pianorolls. I like the Korg Gadget interface, but want a tracker for MIDI.

RankingMember - 22 days ago

I'm familiar with Reaper but not this- can anyone who's used both give any color to the differences between this and a DAW like Reaper?

kookamamie - 22 days ago

> Information to warez groups

Oh wow!

fabiofzero - 22 days ago

This DAW has been in development for a long while but it's never been stable enough to be used seriously. I thought the project was dead until five minutes ago. Worth giving a try again, maybe.

bigfishrunning - 21 days ago

It makes me happy to see s7 scheme making it into more programs -- It's a lovely tool for adding scriptability to any program

weinzierl - 22 days ago

Oh wow, for someone who grew up with trackers and is now mostly a Reaper guy this sounds really interesting.

What on earth do they use LLVM for?

brcmthrowaway - 22 days ago

How does this compare to Nodal ? https://nodalmusic.com

leothetechguy - 22 days ago

I use it and love it. Worth the money!

ConanRus - 22 days ago

the most popular one would be Renoise

DidYaWipe - 22 days ago

Bummer about the reported Mac issues. Anybody have experience with it there?

I have Logic, so I will probably never devote the time to trying to fix this. But maybe if I understood the "tracker" interface it would be more appealing.

austinallegro - 22 days ago

https://youtu.be/dw4A97V8mhM

Coming to a theatre near you this Summer... The Curies.