Ultimate Soundtracker
Ultimate Soundtracker, or Soundtracker for short, is a music tracker program for the Commodore Amiga. It is the creation of Karsten Obarski, a German software developer and composer at a game development company EAS.[2][3]
Original author(s) | Karsten Obarski |
---|---|
Initial release | 1987 |
Stable release | 2.6
/ 1992[1] |
Operating system | AmigaOS |
Platform | Amiga |
Type | Tracker (music software) |
License | Commercial |
History
Soundtracker started as a tool for game sound development for the Amiga.[4] The program allowed for four-channel hardware mixing on all Amiga computers, but unlike subsequent versions, limited the number of samples/instruments in a song to 15. It allocated the four channels in strict fashion: melody (lead), accompaniment, bass, and percussion.[5][6] It could export the tracks as a sequence of assembly instructions.[7]
Soundtracker was released as a commercial product in mid 1987. It did not enjoy success as a general music development software,[2] with reviews calling it "illogical", "difficult" and "temperamental"; it was eclipsed in that market by programs such as Aegis' Sonix and Electronic Arts' Deluxe Music Construction Set.[6] It became however a standard for games sound on the Amiga.[7] The original code of Sound Tracker was disassembled and the modified versions of the program were spread across the burgeoning Amiga underground.[2] A disk of instrument samples (ST-01) was distributed together with the program.[6] In 1989, the program was improved upon by two Swedish programmers, Pex “Mahoney” Tufvesson and Anders “Kaktus” Berkeman, who released a version known as NoiseTracker. Some versions turned out to be incompatible with the Amiga OS 2.0, causing crashes. ProTracker was another successor, released in 1991, which solved the stability problems and made several changes to the user interface.[6]
See also
- List of audio trackers
- Chiptune
Notes
- Broomfield, Mat (1992-10-01). "Soundtracker 2.6: music utility". CU Amiga. p. 139. Retrieved 2011-02-21.
83%
- Kotlinski, Johan (2009). "Amiga Music Programs 1986-1995" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
- Collins source says the company is Reline but Obarski speaks of EAS in the interview for Bitfellas
- Driscoll, Kevin & Diaz, Joshua (2009). "Endless loop: A brief history of chiptunes". Transformative Works and Cultures. no.2. doi:10.3983/twc.2009.0096. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
Most importantly, Soundtracker provided an environment in which nonprogrammers could access the sophisticated music tools in their home computers without needing to learn a programming language.
- Collins 2007
- Wright 1998
- Collins 2008
References
- Collins, Karen (2008), Game sound: an introduction to the history, theory, and practice of video game music and sound design, MIT Press, p. 58, ISBN 0-262-03378-X
- Collins, Karen (June 2007), MIDI and MOD format (PDF), gamessound.com, archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-08-06
- Wright, Mark (March 1998), Retrospective - Karsten Obarski, textfiles.com
Further reading
- Anders Carlsson (2008), Chip Music: Low Tech Data Music Sharing in Karen Collins (ed.), From Pac-Man to pop music: interactive audio in games and new media, Ashgate, ISBN 0-7546-6200-4
- Interview with Obarski at the Amiga Music Preservation website
External links
- Demo on YouTube
- The Tracker History Graphing Project contains both SVG and Postscript graph of Soundtrackers' evolution.