C
charger
New member
Actually, FruityLoops, Buzz, and Orion classify themselves as trackers, it's not my classification. And calling Fruity a "beats program" is not correct. There is nothing in Fruity that requires you to create a "beat." In fact, I've used it just create synth loops or ambience loops, with no drums whatsoever, and there are several included sample songs that take the same approach. It's a sample-playback system that incorporates built in sound generators (softsynths) and allows you to create patterns and songs, but it's far beyond any drum machine or "beats program" I've ever seen.
The most obvious difference between a "sampler" and a program like Acid or CoolEdit that can "handle loops" is that a sampler is designed to play back samples using some sort of input, e.g. MIDI. So you can set up your sampler to play back a piano sample of middle C, and then by pressing the C# key, it will speed the sample up a little bit so it sounds as a C#. In a program like CoolEdit, getting that to happen requires actually physically pitching the sample up. Try to play a 2-bar 16th note run in a sampler using a piano multisample, and it's pretty easy. Try to manually create the same thing in CoolEdit, and I'll see you next June.
The most obvious difference between a "sampler" and a program like Acid or CoolEdit that can "handle loops" is that a sampler is designed to play back samples using some sort of input, e.g. MIDI. So you can set up your sampler to play back a piano sample of middle C, and then by pressing the C# key, it will speed the sample up a little bit so it sounds as a C#. In a program like CoolEdit, getting that to happen requires actually physically pitching the sample up. Try to play a 2-bar 16th note run in a sampler using a piano multisample, and it's pretty easy. Try to manually create the same thing in CoolEdit, and I'll see you next June.