My first music program was something called MED for the Amiga computer, back in 1990 or 91.  It could play up to four parts, using vertical columns for the parts with 64 rows for rhythms.  You could assign whatever value you wanted to the rows (say sixteenth notes, or 16th triplets if you wanted to use triplets anywhere).  You would enter a note by a C4 type designation and hit enter on a row if you wanted the note to sustain.  For example, C4 followed by 3 rows of "enter" would give you a quarter note if you decided that each row is a sixteenth.  As I recall, the sound samples were actually pretty good.  You could create your own waves, but I didn't know anything about how to do that then.  You could also add vibrato through some keystroke and control lthe volume and tempo, but that was it for controls.  In any case, it was loads of fun when I was in 10th grade.

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  • My buddy had an AMIGA. His music program, i dont recall the name, you entered notes on staff. i remember it being rather state of the art at the time.

    My first, personally... was Fruity Loops sequencer. Started out trackign and mixing (Cool Edit Pro, forerunner to Adobe Audition) young musician friends to make a demo, then making drum tracks for drum-less tracks and for guitarists to practice to, then became intrigued with pitched music and never looked back.
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  • Music Time for Apple Mac in about 1995.

    It was on my father's computer and wasn't a bad scoring and midi program.

    I used it to drive a sound module with midi cables connected and did my first round of composing on it.

    I returned to composing about 5 years ago and my later works are a lot better, but I will maybe dig out the early stuff.
    Graffiti 2000 S.r.L.
  • In the very late 80s to early 90s, I discovered that the YAMAHA PSS-795 could sequence 8 tracks simultaneously. It had 50 rhythms/accompaniment (which I didn't use apart from one that had a very quiet hi-hat tapping out the beat) and 99 different voices which sort of covered the whole spectrum. You could also change the voices on the same track (once you really mastered the machine that is, which took about a year). But strangely enough, I managed to get some pretty sound compositions out of it. The main thread to ''Spirit of the Stour'' was composed on that machine, as was ''Alphabet Green'' and the trio in the scherzo of my string quartet. However, to get the sound of a whole orchestra was impossible unless you used strings all-in, and a multi-brass choir, and left out one of the woodwind instruments. So a bit limited to say the least. But there was nothing else on the market at that time (not that I could afford anyway), and I had tremendous fun with it. There was nothing I liked better than to stock up with a six-pack of Carlsberg Special Brew and spend the evening ''composing''. The biggest fallback was the sound of the solo strings......ouch! They were bloody awful!!! The violin sounded like a strangled cat.

    Then, when I went to Nelson and Colne College of Further Education to study A'level Music and Music Technology in 1994, I was introduced to my first computerised sequencer; "Atari Notator". This wasn't much different to the sequencers of today. A lot more primitive obviously but it certainly did the job. Software samples didn't exist in those days, so the computer was hooked up to a tone generator called a Yamaha TG100, which was about the size of a digital alarm clock. There were a very limited number of synthesised samples (not organic samples) but they weren't too bad, and certainly apt for orchestral composition. In the recording studio at the college, there was a much better tone generator called a ''Proteus'' but we weren't allowed to use that without supervision.

    Then in the late 90s at university, I was introduced to Digital Performer and a Yamaha TG500. Plus for electro-acoustic composition, we used Pro-tools.

    And that's about it, until a few years ago when I bought Cubase and somebody bought me Miroslav Orchestra and Choir Workstation.
  • My first music program was C-LAB Notator which ran on a Commodore-64 Computer. That was in 1983. Later it ran on an Atari 1040ST and eventually Notator became Apple's Logic Pro.
  • 6 pack of Special Brew ?

    That really is getting desperate !
  • Well, maybe I exaggerated a bit. It's all energy drinks now, in my case.

    Adrian Allan said:
    6 pack of Special Brew ?

    That really is getting desperate !
    What was the first computer music program you used?
    My first music program was something called MED for the Amiga computer, back in 1990 or 91.  It could play up to four parts, using vertical columns f…
  • Special brew was always known as tramps' brew because of it strength and cheapness. A bottle of white lightning delivers a similar cheap hit.

    I think we need a thread here on whether drugs are a useful aid to composition, either from personal experience or otherwise.

    The only drug I really want to try is Ayahuasca
  • I can't see drugs being a useful aid to composition really. Back in my drinking days, I used to think what I was composing was amazing until the next morning. Now, when I compose sobre, and I was to have a drink and listen to it, the effect would be the opposite, I guess.

    Adrian Allan said:
    Special brew was always known as tramps' brew because of it strength and cheapness. A bottle of white lightning delivers a similar cheap hit.

    I think we need a thread here on whether drugs are a useful aid to composition, either from personal experience or otherwise.

    The only drug I really want to try is Ayahuasca
    What was the first computer music program you used?
    My first music program was something called MED for the Amiga computer, back in 1990 or 91.  It could play up to four parts, using vertical columns f…
  • My very first computer music software I ever used was Finale Notepad. Looking back, I dont know how I was able to not just write music, but write, print, and distribute full scores and parts for large ensembles with only being allowed to use 8 staves.
  • Fun topic. The first computer music program I ever used was MidiSoft Studio on a friend's PC back in 1990 or 1991. It was connected to an old consumer Casio keyboard. In retrospect, I'm not sure if the Casio could have played back with multiple voices, but at the time I just knew how to configure it to play one voice, so I wrote mainly piano pieces. However, since it wasn't touch-sensitive, everything came out at the same velocity. :) still a lot of fun for the time
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