Music disk
Music Sound
Music disk
Music disk, or musicdisk, is a term used by the
demoscene to describe a collection of songs made on a computer. They are
essentially the computer equivalent of a music album. A music disk is
typically packaged in the form of a program with a custom user
interface, so the listener does not need other software to play the
songs. The "disk" part of the term comes from the fact that music disks
were once made to fit on a single floppy disk, so they could be easily
distributed between friends and at demo parties. On modern platforms,
music disks are usually downloaded to a hard disk drive.
Songs in a music disk are typically composed with a
tracker, a type of program popular in the demoscene. Amiga music disks usually
consist of MOD files, while PC music disks often contain multichannel formats
such as XM or IT. Music disks are also common on the Commodore 64 and Atari ST,
where they use the native SID and YM formats, respectively.
Related terms include music pack, which can refer to a demoscene music
collection that does not include its own player, and chipdisk, a
music disk containing only
chiptunes,
which have become popular on the PC given the large size of
MP3 music disks.
External links
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Music Sound, v. 2.0, by MultiMedia
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