If you are new to using a tracker, I would suggest
Seq24:
http://filter24.org/seq24/
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/8304
After you get the hang of it, you can go back to
cheese tracker, or try LMMS:
http://lmms.sourceforge.net/
--- Jeremiah Benham <jjbenham(a)chicagoguitar.com>
wrote:
I am sorry for the stupid question but I am
interested in learning to
use a tracker. I have heard music created with such
software and I think
it sounds pretty cool. I have never used a tracker
before so I don't
care if it is a good tracker. I just want to learn a
tracker that is
well documented for the tracker newbee. Later I may
a use a better
tracker but I am looking for one to use that is the
most well documented
at the moment. How different is seq24 from a
tracker? i have used it and
very much like it. I am also a csound junkie so I
kind of want something
that I can intergrate with csounds somehow. Didn't
someone build a
tracker interface to csounds or something once? I
want the tracker to
really give me ideas for things to do in csound. I
like the sounds and
ideas James comes up with using cheesetracker. I
don't know how to get
started using it though. I installed it and am
scratching my head over
how to get started with it. I tried freewheeling
recording my csounds
output from jack. That was alot of fun. I was
looping extremely small
samples and allowing them to clip creating really
grungy sounds and
controlling the notes on my external midi keyboard.
So can anyone
suggest a tracker that is well document and possibly
anouther that has
cool features that fit the kind of things that I
like to do.
Jeremiah
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