Deluxe Music Construction Set

Deluxe Music Construction Set (DMCS) is a 1986 music composition, notation and playback program for the Amiga[1] and Macintosh. The program was originally released as Will Harvey's Music Construction Set for the Apple II and other computers, but was redesigned (and the Will Harvey name dropped) for the deluxe version. DMCS was created by Geoff Brown and published by Electronic Arts (EA). Ariolasoft published the program in Europe under license from EA.

Deluxe Music Construction Set
In-program screenshot (Macintosh)
Original author(s)Geoff Brown
Developer(s)Electronic Arts
Initial release1986 (1986)
PlatformAmiga, Macintosh
TypeMusic composition

Summary

DMCS was the first of a line of music programs for the Amiga to make use of its four voice 8-bit sample playback and MIDI synthesis. Some compared the Amiga's sample playback, at the time, to the first Ensoniq Mirage Sampler which was selling for more than US$1000 in the mid-1980s. This program required 256 kB of RAM. However, it could be used for sample playback and complex music composition with 512 kB of RAM.

DMCS included Bach's Fugue in G minor "Little".

DMCS was more complex and capable than the first music application that EA made for the Commodore 64, Apple II, Atari and Atari ST computers, Music Construction Set. For example, it allowed users to enter lyrics in with the musical score, though the lyrics were strictly for the user's benefit, as the program did not attempt to "sing" the words.

DMCS was also released for the Macintosh, though it was hampered by its copy protection, which used a low-level code encryption that skirted the Macintosh toolbox, resulting in it becoming incompatible with Macintosh System software when upgraded to System 6.

Unreleased port

In 1986, a port by Randel B. Reiss[2] for the Apple IIGS was written, which uses the built-in Ensoniq wavetable sample-based synthesizer. Screen shots appeared in various catalogues and was scheduled for a fall of 1987 release. The port was never publicly released, but its music engine was used for producing the soundtrack for the Apple IIGS game titles Zany Golf and The Immortal, both of which were written by Will Harvey.[3]

Reception

After testing a beta of the Amiga version, Info stated that Deluxe Music "offers the most accurate standard music notation display and editing features I've ever seen ... it is a flexible, detailed composition program".[4]

gollark: The new iGPUs are several times more powerful than my ~4 year old one apparently.
gollark: I believe they are to release discrete cards this year. Although with 10nm/7nm held up who knows.
gollark: This is my laptop's integrated one.
gollark: (Modded Minecraft, so it isn't even that horribly awful)
gollark: I can play Minecraft at an amazing 50FPS on my 1366x768 monitor.

References

  1. http://aminet.net/package/mus/edit/dmcs2dem Deluxe Music 2.0 demo
  2. "Randel Reiss, Producer". Archived from the original on February 6, 2005. Retrieved 2005-02-06.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  3. Hague, James. "The Giant List of Classic Game Programmers".
  4. Herrington, Peggy (January–February 1987). "Amiga Music: The State Of The Art". Info. pp. 56–58, 62.CS1 maint: date format (link)


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