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Post by tugBUT on Jan 31, 2014 19:28:39 GMT 1
HOLY CRAP! I honestly thought you made that Dubstep song with a different sequencer. But knowing this comes from Musagi changes everything... /me wanders off mumbling That was a fun experiment. In hindsight I realize that I may have abused the "Chorus" effect a bit, but oh well. We're among friends here 
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Post by Deleted on Feb 9, 2014 17:28:09 GMT 1
Currently listening to Mood Settings Menu & Only Time Will Tell! These songs have a nice sound but such different moods/styles to them, I love it! 
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Post by tugBUT on May 3, 2016 21:38:28 GMT 1
Hi. The last three years have been fun. Anyone still out there? Hmm. Love to hear from some old friends on this forum  Welp, here's a few fun tunes I've cooked up in Musagi (still one of my fav programmes) oxygen machine.smu some field somewhere probably
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Post by Deleted on May 5, 2016 1:06:57 GMT 1
Hi tugBUT!
You have a delightful sense of harmony! :-) Well, I guess I'm not exactly an OLD friend, but maybe a new one ha?
I listened to your two latest tracks and the chords/harmony were unexpected! In a super way of course. Sort of a pleasant dissonance, I guess? The consonance (un-dissonance ?) was also noice! Especially the sounds in Oxygen Machine. That song has a nice shifting groove about it.
Anyhoo, welcome back to the forum and the oodles and gobbs of forum-ers haha
P.S. If I can take a little more liberty here, Musagi is one of my favs as well! That's because at least for one, Musagi is one of few apps that combine the flexibility of tracker music with actually intuitive and user-friendly GUI design! Bring the Musagi 2.0! xD
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Post by tugBUT on Jun 4, 2016 19:50:53 GMT 1
Thank you! Yes, the harmony is strange. The piece is more of an exploration of alternative dominant-tonic relationships, particularly using rhythm elements and form to create (and deny) expectations rather than use any particular chord progression. It was VERY fun because I wasn't at all concerned what notes were playing! Only that they should convey some relative motion. That all became less important as the piece developed as I became more and more lost in the process. So yeah, dissonance and consonance is like apples and oranges. I believe Taron once likened the "dissonance meter" to a "brilliance meter!" Schoenberg would be proud, lol  As for musagi 2.0, jokes aside, as intuitive as the program is, it's aging FAST. I say start fresh with python and say goodbye to the existing code. Recreate! Recreate!
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