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This is a list of software for various operating systems for playing Amiga music formats. OpenCubic Player, an example of a typical MOD player with visualization (STFT, spectrum etc.) Audacious – various third party plug-ins have been written to play Amiga formats; Foobar2000 – various third party plug-ins have been written to play Amiga ...
Module file (MOD music, tracker music) is a family of music file formats originating from the MOD file format on Amiga systems used in the late 1980s. Those who produce these files (using the software called music trackers) and listen to them form the worldwide MOD scene, [1] a part of the demoscene subculture.
Protracker is a music tracker for the Amiga platform. A free software tool that required no additional equipment, it became popular in the early 1990s with both amateurs and professionals, allowing for sample-based music in the MOD file format. [1]
MOD is a computer file format used primarily to represent music, and was the first module file format. MOD files use the “.MOD” file extension, except on the Amiga which doesn't rely on filename extensions; instead, it reads a file's header to determine filetype.
ModPlug Player is a module file player developed by Olivier Lapicque in conjunction with the original ModPlug Tracker project and the ModPlug Browser plugin. [1] Features include a playlist editor, graphical equalizer, automatic gain control, bass expansion, reverb , Dolby Surround Sound support and the ability to mix two modules simultaneously ...
From the typical 4 MOD channels of the Amiga, the limit had moved to 7 with TFMX players and 8, first with Oktalyzer and later with the vastly more popular OctaMED (Amiga, 1989), then 32 with ScreamTracker 3 (PC, 1994) and 16 with FastTracker 2 (PC, 1994) and on to 64 with Impulse Tracker (PC, 1995) and MED SoundStudio (updated version of ...
The worldwide usage of these programs led to the creation of the so-called MOD-scene which was considered part of the demoscene. Eventually the PC world evolved to 16-bit audio cards, and Mod files were slowly abandoned. Various Amiga and PC games (such as Worms) supported Mod as their internal standard for generating music and audio effects.
OpenMPT was initially developed as a browser plug-in called MOD Plugin, [7] which enabled users to play music and other sounds encoded in module files. ModPlug Tracker, along with a player application named ModPlug Player , evolved from this plug-in. [ 8 ]