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Replies
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Mon 17 Sep 2007, 12:33
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 1
Joined: 30-Sep 03
From: Denbosch - NL
Member No.: 25,742
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aahh, KCS, and the wonderful Tiger and Tigercub... my first sequencer on the amiga and still dearly missed... I did lots of gigs with that, and even though I'm using Logic now, I still miss a lot of features....I saw Plaid perform with it in the early days... I must have a hundred floppies with KCS tracks I can't use anymore...
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Mon 17 Sep 2007, 23:50
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 1
Joined: 16-Sep 07
From: Falun - SE
Member No.: 94,930
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Dear Desperate Sandwich
Are you sure there was ever a version for the Mac?
I still have KCS running on my old Atari via a little work-around-box called "Romatic Robot" (this was used to circumvent Dr Tobenfeldts piracy protection policy which dissallowed the making of backup diskettes). However the contacts on the box are getting worn out and its not much longer for this world. I dust it off occasionally and demonstrate "Open Mode" to my students. They've never seen anything like it before. (Some, however, compare it to Live and say that Lives interface is better... but what do they know?)
Have you checked out Cycling 74s Max/MSP. I think it might suit you down to the ground. (You maybe programmed Sinclairs in your youth)
regards from a piece of Swedish crisp bread!
This post has been edited by exsend: Mon 17 Sep 2007, 23:51
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Tue 18 Sep 2007, 05:17
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 16
Joined: 24-Nov 04
From: Corvallis - US
Member No.: 55,510
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Good grief, things in this topic take me back. I remember my first MIDI sequencer on my TRS Color Computer - can't recall the name but it was done by Dr. Lester Hands, and I used it with my hotshit new DX7. Working with list data and thinking it was way cool. And what a thrill it was. But I loved Bars and Pipes on my Amiga - crazy interface, but it worked really well for me. By then I had a Roland U-20. Tinkering with ADSR and stuff. And that was a thrill, too. A real multi-timbral orchestra at my fingertips. I spent a lot of time learning how to articulate instruments so that even when played on the keyboard they sounded like what they were supposed to be - horns, and flutes and violins and such. It was so cool.
Now I am waiting for Logic Studio, which was supposed to arrive today but didn't. I am hoping for another thrill, but you know, I don't think it will ever be quite what it was in those days. Maybe I am jaded, but it's like discovering there are no longer any spices or herbs in the world I have not heard of and probably own (which is true in my case) - it's not like there is nothing new, but we came a long way in a short time in those days.
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Tue 25 Sep 2007, 15:08
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Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 8
Joined: 06-Nov 02
From: Sandwich - UK
Member No.: 9,036
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Thanks to everyone who responded to my quest. Exsend, as a point of interest, the version for the Mac did come out at the same time – mid-80s – as the version for the Atari ST, so it must have been for System 6. And as you point out, (apart from the extraordinary Programmable Variations Generator and Master Edit) the most especial aspect of the program is Open Mode, absolutely perfect for composing where structure (and experimenting in structure) is paramount. In the end, I am bereft off this masterpiece of technology and my only recourse (apart from continuing to search the Mac version amongst folk like you) is yes – to find another Atari ST and run the thing on that – or to explore the possibilities of running an ST emulation on a (yuk!!!!) PC (I know there's one prog for Windoze, STeem, that apparently does a goodly job... that means (if it works) getting a Windozy machine, which I'd rather not do, but...
Again, thanks to you all. If I get lucky and solve my prob, I'll be back with my solution (this might help poesco with the 100s of KCS floppies).
regards
michael of Sandwitch
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