Scream Tracker
Original authorSami Tammilehto
DeveloperFuture Crew (FC)
Release1990; 36 years ago (1990) (Scream Tracker 2.2)
Final release
3.21 / 1994; 32 years ago (1994)
Written inC and assembly
Operating systemDOS
TypeTracker
LicenseFreeware

Scream Tracker is a tracker (an integrated multi-track step sequencer and sampler as a software application). It was created by Psi (Sami Tammilehto), one of the founders of the Finnish demogroup Future Crew.[1][2] It was written in C and assembly language.

The first version (1.0) had monophonic 4-bit output via the PC speaker, as well as 8-bit output via Covox's Speech Thing (a digital-to-analog converter using the parallel port) or a Sound Blaster 1.x card.

The first popular version of Scream Tracker, version 2.2, was published in 1990.[3] Versions prior to 3.0 created STM (Scream Tracker Module) files, while versions 3.0 and above used the S3M (ScreamTracker 3 Module) format.

As of version 3.0, Scream Tracker supports up to 99 8-bit samples, 32 channels, 100 patterns, and 256 order positions. It can also handle up to 9 FM-synthesis channels on sound cards using the popular OPL2/3/4 chipsets, and, unusually, can play PCM samples and FM instruments at the same time. There are channels referred to as R1..8, L1..8 and A1..9 to be assigned to those 32 ones, which gives an effective amount of only 25 channels. 16-position free panning is available using the S8x command, but only on the Gravis Ultrasound. The usage of the A channels requires the presence of an AdLib-compatible card either by itself or alongside another sound card.

The last version of Scream Tracker was 3.21, released in 1994, placing it in competition with FastTracker 2. It was the precursor of the PC tracking scene and its interface inspired newer trackers like Impulse Tracker.[4][5] Various other trackers (such as Impulse Tracker or OpenMPT) adopted the use of the Scream Tracker's S3M format.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Walker, Martin (July 2004). "PC Music Freeware Roundup". Sound on Sound. Retrieved 2010-05-29. When PCs first came of age for music making in the mid '90s, ScreamTracker was one of the first music software packages to appear with sample support,...
  2. ^ Leonard, Andrew (1999-04-29). "Mod love". Salon.com. Salon Media Group. Archived from the original on 2009-11-24. Retrieved 2010-05-17.
  3. ^ Markku Reunanen (2019). "Trackerit: paradigman synty, kukoistus ja myöhemmät vaiheet". Musiikki Ja Teknologia III (in Finnish). 49 (2): 24. ISSN 0355-1059.
  4. ^ Lim, Jeffrey. "Features of Impulse Tracker". Archived from the original on 2009-03-28. Retrieved 2009-04-07.
  5. ^ Matsuoka, Claudio (2007-11-04). "Tracker History Graphing Project". helllabs.org. Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-01-29.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

List of music software

NoiseTracker (Amiga, 1989) OctaMED (Amiga, 1989) Protracker (Amiga, 1990) ScreamTracker (PC, 1994) FastTracker 2 (PC, 1994) Impulse Tracker (PC, 1995) Ableton

Module file

sound. The AHX tracker requires Kickstart 2.0 and 2 Mb RAM memory. The ScreamTracker 3 format (.S3M) The Scream Tracker 3 S3M format added sample tuning

Music tracker

later with the vastly more popular OctaMED (Amiga, 1989), then 32 with ScreamTracker 3 (PC, 1994) and 16 with FastTracker 2 (PC, 1994) and on to 64 with

Future Crew

2010-05-29. When PCs first came of age for music making in the mid '90s, ScreamTracker was one of the first music software packages to appear with sample support

Comparison of scorewriters

cut-down MIDI format by Creative Labs, .cmf Module file, .mod, .s3m (ScreamTracker 3) NoteWorthy Composer native format, .nwc or .nwctxt ABC plain text

Impulse Tracker

before switching to Ableton Live. Free and open-source software portal ScreamTracker FastTracker 2 List of audio trackers Kenneth B. McAlpine (2018). Bits

Second Reality

Second Reality download on scene.org Second Reality soundtrack in ScreamTracker 3 format Second Reality source code on GitHub Video footage taken during