It's OK, but it's more like Impulse Tracker than Buzz. (Impulse Tracker was the best of breed of its kind; Buzz was a radical departure from the traditional tracker. Buzz would better be called "Studio" than "Tracker", since it allowed you to chain modules together in endlessly inventive ways; e.g., if your CPU coped, you could have 9 reverbs in a chain feeding off a chorus that was connected to a sawtooth synth.) > Cheesetracker? > > On 10/12/05, reubenf@xxxxxxxxx <reubenf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> The only windows application I miss is buzz tracker >> (www.buzzmachines.com). I know it is possible to run it under wine, but >> I >> have had very little luck using that method (IME it is slow, and the >> sound >> has latency problems.) >> >> Instructions here: http://web.hibo.no/~mva/viewreview.php?id=706 >> >> Anyone had better experience using this method? >> >> I know there was a project under development (called fuzz tracker) that >> aimed to port the code to linux (actually, it would have been a rewrite, >> since the original developer lost his source when his hard drive >> crashed. >> DOH!) But this seems to have disappeared. >> >> Are there any buzz-like applications available for linux which are as >> flexible as buzz is? >> >> Cheers >> Reuben >> >> >> >> > >