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Milkytracker keyboard shortcuts
Milkytracker keyboard shortcuts












milkytracker keyboard shortcuts

It's one of the most wonderful things you can do with a computer, IMO. if in doubt, just don't show it to anyone (yet), but do make music regardless. I can sing in the shower, or "think music", but when I sit down with a tracker, I'm still surprised by the results, like, I didn't come up with this, I just found it. I say that because a friend of mine thinks making music is somehow translating the music we can compose in our heads into reality, and at least for me, that's not the case. As far as hobbies go, this is like owning a dog, it does everybody good (should they have any affinity for it at all, that is). It's what I did, and I think if you like music enough to enjoy it, and if you are making it to entertain yourself, practice might not make you perfect, but it will gift you some things you wouldn't have thought you have in you. I recommend it to everybody, and I recommend sticking through years of feeling completely useless at it. Considering what other people are doing with it and the legacy of tracking in general, I don't feel like a king of the nerd hill though, but I do feel like the captain of my bathtub.

milkytracker keyboard shortcuts

Other than denoising samples, I do it all in Renoise. I like the agility of this one-person studio that starts up in like 1 second too much, and even if I had the ability to master well, I wouldn't want to render tracks from Renoise to then master them in another program. having a rich sound is nice, but seeing all columns on one screen is awesome, as is rendering a 5 minute song in 20 seconds instead of 3 minutes. The less I use to achieve something I can shake my butt to, the more I like it. I think my music became much simpler, too, maybe "worse", but more fun for me, because instead of layering instruments that play the same melody in another octave and a lot of effects, I now remove things with equal glee as I add them with. I know the listener doesn't and shouldn't care about that, but it's a trade-off I make gladly. I can try to touch it up some, or steal parts I like to make something new, with filesizes ranging from a few hundred kilobytes to a few dozen megabytes at most. and though with Renoise the VST matter a lot, since I still have those I still can load up and work on things I made over a decade ago. Instead of a mess of giant files of things bounced from various programs or even hardware, it's just a file. and after hating it for a long time, I actually now love it to not ever consider anything "finished", and trackers are perfect for that. Though I agree about the structure (and keyboard shortcuts) being helpful, derping around endless is still how I use trackers.














Milkytracker keyboard shortcuts