Dr. T's Music Software

Dr. T's Music Software was a software company based in Massachusetts. Development was started in 1984 by Emile Tobenfeld.[1] The company operated until the mid-1990s, and developed music software for the Commodore 64, Commodore 128, Commodore Amiga, Macintosh and mainly the Atari ST.[1]

Products

Software

  • Hitman - cue sheets
  • X-oR (Amiga, Macintosh) - patch editor[2][3]
  • Tunesmith - composing
  • Tiger Cub (Atari ST) - sequencer[4]
  • Tiger - sequencer
  • Samplemaker - sample editor
  • Realtime 1.2 - sequencer
  • Music Mouse - composing
  • Midi Recording Studio (Atari ST, Amiga) - sequencer[5][6]
  • M - composing
  • Keys! - composing
  • KCS - sequencer (Commodore 64/128, Amiga)[7][8][9]
  • KCS Omega - Keyboard Controlled Sequencer
  • Tempo Master MPE
  • Fingers - composing
  • Copyist Professional (Amiga) - scoring[10]
  • Copyist Apprentice (Amiga) - scoring[11]
  • Algorithmic Composer (Commodore 64/128) - algorithmic composition
  • Echo Plus
  • Convertifile Plus
  • T-Basic (Atari) - BASIC programming[12]

Patch editors for:[13]

Hardware

  • Model-A (Amiga 500/1000) - MIDI interface
  • Model-T (Commodore 64/128) - MIDI interface
  • Phantom - MIDI interface/SMPTE synchroniser
gollark: You need to actually have devices with those IPs.
gollark: Technically 80% or so of my workload could run fine on a raspberry pi.
gollark: I got a great deal on an old sandy bridge tower thing a while ago.
gollark: Yes, ideally learn networking first.
gollark: My home server runs that sort of thing but also my personal website and such.

References

  1. "The Doctor Is In". STart. Vol. 3 no. 9. April 1989. pp. 46–7. ISSN 0889-6216. OCLC 14047163.
  2. "Audio". .info. No. 49. April 1992. pp. 45–47. ISSN 0897-5868. OCLC 17565429.
  3. Rubin, David M. (1992). The Audible Macintosh. Sybex. X-oR, pp. 152–6. ISBN 0782110452. OCLC 924911746.
  4. "Tiger Cub". STart. No. 38. November 1990. pp. 82–83. ISSN 0889-6216. OCLC 14047163.
  5. "U2 can play music?". ZZap!. No. 64. August 1990. pp. 41–42. OCLC 221369109.
  6. "Dr. T's MIDI Recording Studio". Atari Explorer. Vol. 8 no. 1. January–February 1988. pp. 27–30. ISSN 0882-3340. OCLC 11835345.CS1 maint: date format (link)
  7. "Music by the Numbers". Compute!. No. 103. December 1988. p. 41. ISSN 0194-357X. OCLC 767965694.
  8. "Dr. T's (KCS V1.6) MIDI Sequencer". Amiga User International. July 1988. pp. 48–9. ISSN 0955-1077. OCLC 465372833.
  9. "Dr. T's C128 Keyboard Controlled Sequencer". Commodore Magazine. November 1987. pp. 38, 127. OCLC 16109538.
  10. "The Copyist Professional". Amiga World. Vol. 5 no. 5. May 1989. pp. 14, 66–8. ISSN 0883-2390. OCLC 925165916.
  11. "What's new from Dr T?". The Australian Commodore and Amiga Review. Vol. 7 no. 5. May 1990. pp. 17–18, 20–21. ISSN 1034-3806. OCLC 220898079.
  12. "Dr. T's T-Basic". STart. Vol. 4 no. 10. May 1990. pp. 43–5. ISSN 0889-6216. OCLC 14047163.
  13. "MIDI Editor/Librarians". Amiga World. Vol. 4 no. 6. June 1988. p. 48. ISSN 0883-2390. OCLC 925165916.
  14. "Best D-50 Editor/Librarians". Antic's Amiga Plus. Vol. 1 no. 5. December 1989 – January 1990. pp. 43–4. ISSN 1044-8306. OCLC 19913530.
  15. "Taming the TX81z Tone Generator". STart. Vol. 4 no. 4. November 1989. pp. 79–84. ISSN 0889-6216. OCLC 14047163.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.