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Post by Louigi Verona on Apr 13, 2009 8:36:32 GMT
I am not a fan of recent Scooter albums. But their first few are very good. The one that I especially like though is their first work "...and the beat goes on". The sounds, the arrangements - all that is very original and very 1990s (early 1990s, I should point out). I still believe that this album is one of the most original works among rave/dance music.
Anyway, they didn't have sequencers we have today. So I was wondering - what do you think they've used for this specific album? Hardware? Specialized software? Both? What kind of?
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Post by Gavin on Apr 13, 2009 12:52:44 GMT
Who?
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Post by Louigi Verona on Apr 14, 2009 7:47:54 GMT
Bwa-ha-ha. I got yer joke, man. Ok.
Let's take someone else. Any other band from the 1990-1994 period.
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Post by Minimoog on Apr 14, 2009 22:37:02 GMT
There were a few hardware sequencers back then - Roland CSQ, Yamaha QX at one end and Fairlight and Synclavier at the other.
In software there was Cubase and C-Lab Notator on the Atari ST.
In fact thinking about it they were all mid-80s. There were probably quite a few more by the early 90s but I don't remember much. Akai MPC, Linn 9000? I know our Korg M1 had a sequencer built in.
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Post by Gavin on Apr 15, 2009 10:44:43 GMT
Im confused.
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Post by Minimoog on Apr 15, 2009 19:27:43 GMT
They're a crap rave/happy hardcore outfit who heartlessly commit that most heinous of 'musical' crimes - the Pinky and Perky-style vocal.
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Post by nervejam on Apr 20, 2009 12:11:30 GMT
Wasn't scooter a frog on the muppet show?
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Post by Gavin on Apr 20, 2009 15:18:21 GMT
Wasn't scooter a frog on the muppet show? I dont think he was a frog. He was the little guy that was really enthusiastic.
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Post by Minimoog on Apr 20, 2009 21:56:05 GMT
Wasn't scooter a frog on the muppet show? You're thinking of Kermit
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