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20 votes
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Power Composer - Music-making software, MIDI editor, soundfont synth - free early access on Windows
https://www.powercomposer.net/ I am not affiliated with this project, I just think it's awesome and deserves more publicity. Power Composer is a piano-reel-style MIDI editor built in the Godot...
https://www.powercomposer.net/
I am not affiliated with this project, I just think it's awesome and deserves more publicity.
Power Composer is a piano-reel-style MIDI editor built in the Godot game engine (though it is a tool, not a game). It's intended to be lighter and more accessible than a DAW, but still quite powerful. The dev has been quietly working on it for a while now and just recently made a free early-access Windows build available!
I've been keeping an eye on it ever since it was featured in the Godot 2024 showreel, as I've wanted something like it for a while. Several years ago, I was playing around with Chrome Music Lab's "Song Maker" so I could use it in my classroom. I ended up having such a great time that I got incredibly sidetracked and spent a while just writing stuff. I know the grid-based sequencer isn't a novel concept, but something about that particular configuration just clicked with me.
Ever since then, I've been searching for something similar but more capable that still clicks in the same way. I tried Bosca Ceoil, LMMS, and a couple DAWs' MIDI editors, but nothing quite did it. Then I saw Power Composer. Now that I can actually try it, it's just as comfortable as I hoped! I'm a classically-trained music teacher and have been writing/arranging with software like Dorico for years, but something about sequencers (and Power Composer in particular) just feels more freeing to me than traditional notation.
It is not open-source nor is it planned to be, which is a bummer because I'd love to contribute, but I get it - being paid for your work is nice. No word on the release price or timeline yet.
The dev seems like a good guy. In addition to the website above, Power Composer has a Youtube channel and a Discord server, and he is actively taking feature requests and bug reports on the latter.
I've been exploring it a bit and I'd be happy to answer any questions people have about it! Really enjoying it so far.
11 votes -
That new hit song on Spotify? It was made by AI.
23 votes -
An AI-generated country song is topping a Billboard chart, and that should infuriate us all
35 votes -
Eq
11 votes -
Spotify, the world's biggest music streaming service, has announced it is working with major labels on using artificial intelligence in a "responsible" way
17 votes -
The Most Mysterious Song on the Internet - ARD Documentary
11 votes -
Why cassette tapes are coming back
24 votes -
Spotify removed 75m spam tracks over the past year as artificial intelligence tools increase the ability of fraudsters to create fake music
29 votes -
Massive Attack remove music from Spotify to protest against CEO Daniel Ek's investment in AI military
32 votes -
How Lofi Girl became a chill beats empire
41 votes -
Swedish Performing Rights Society signs licensing agreement with Songfox – Stockholm-based start-up lets fans and creators legally produce AI-generated compositions
4 votes -
Enter a Spotify song URL and get it "translated" to other music services
29 votes -
Two minute deep acid in Strudel (from scratch)
10 votes -
The Qweremin (a theremin built with a Commodore 64 and a clamp)
13 votes -
Tape Bowing Ensemble - Open Reel Ensemble (2025)
8 votes -
Dustin Ballard aka There I Ruined It: Is AI ruining music?
10 votes -
Spotify announces 9% price hike for individual plan subscribers starting from September
10 votes -
Why it's better not to listen to Spotify playlists – two recent books reveal the business practices that influence the content offered by this music platform
25 votes -
Peter Gabriel on synthesizers as a "dream machine" (1983)
11 votes -
Ambient music on iOS 18.4 and the return to the Apple’s Music app
7 votes -
LostMyspace.com: recovered music from the botched Myspace server migration
39 votes -
Spotify paid out a record £7.7bn in royalties in 2024 – debate continues about how much money artists and songwriters receive in royalties
21 votes -
The NotaGen sheet music generator
8 votes -
Addison Rae took over TikTok. Now she’s coming for pop.
5 votes -
Is there any escape from the Spotify syndrome?
25 votes -
Jerobeam Fenderson - N-SPHERES (Oscilloscope Music) (2024)
4 votes -
The ugly truth about Spotify is finally revealed
59 votes -
Spotify shuts down ‘Unwrapped’ artist royalty calculator with legal threats – site still includes the formula behind the calculator for artists and music lovers who are curious
54 votes -
The ghosts in the machine, Spotify and production music
12 votes -
PSA - Musicians are being misled out of their AI rights
14 votes -
Spotify Unwrapped - How much do Spotify pay your favourite artist(s) on your behalf?
18 votes -
AirPods or not?
Hi, here is me asking for some advice. I currently have the Sennheiser CX True Wireless but I feel like they are too heavy, big, and uncomfortable for my ears to the point that I feel my earholes...
Hi, here is me asking for some advice.
I currently have the Sennheiser CX True Wireless but I feel like they are too heavy, big, and uncomfortable for my ears to the point that I feel my earholes are being stretched.
I am looking at AirPods right now despite not being committed to the whole Apple eco-system. They seem to be light enough and good quality enough, but I fear getting them is too expensive for what I'm getting given that I would want to use them with my Ubuntu desktop and my Android phone.
What alternatives could you suggest? Or is AirPods the best bang-for-your-buck even if you are not really into the Apple eco-system?
25 votes -
Swedish composer Jacob Mühlrad explains what his new robotic cellist can add to the classical music world, and what it can't
4 votes -
Anthony Fantano discusses how social media disincentivises well thought out discussion
30 votes -
Watch as a robot performs the cello with the Malmö Symphony Orchestra – world premiere of Jacob Mühlrad's composition "Veer"
8 votes -
The end of Finale
12 votes -
Tune into the soulful sounds of someone making edits to a Wikipedia page
24 votes -
Darknet Diaries, Ep 148: Dubsnatch
6 votes -
Music record labels sue AI song-generators Suno and Udio for copyright infringement
15 votes -
Spotify raises US prices of premium streaming plans for second time in one year
33 votes -
Udio | AI music generator
37 votes -
Spotify hikes fees, passing on its tax burden, after the French government introduced a levy to support the nation's music industry
21 votes -
Just bought Philips SHP9500 headphones and am underwhelmed
I have a KZ ZSN Pro IEM and it's been going strong for 4+ years. I also have a cheap Bluetooth QCY IEM that I use for podcasts and when I don't want wires tangling me. Whenever I change from the...
I have a KZ ZSN Pro IEM and it's been going strong for 4+ years.
I also have a cheap Bluetooth QCY IEM that I use for podcasts and when I don't want wires tangling me.
Whenever I change from the Bluetooth QCY to the wired KZ I am in awe. The KZ ZSN Pro is a blast to listen to. Specially metal. The definition, the sound of the bass drums, everything is clear and powerful.
So I decided to try some entry level open back headphones and bought the SHP9500 that was cheap on Aliexpress recently. I thought I would find it even better since a lot of people sang it's praise for the price, but I am underwhelmed.
I find my KZ to have way more definition and power.
Also I need to up the volume of my smartphone quite a bit compared to the IEMs. It is near max volume.
Of course they are different beasts and the IEMs are literally inside my head. I don't really know what I expected.
I'm sure beyerdinamic or other more expensive brands might be better, but I don't feel like going down that path.
I'm going to keep the SHP9500 for a week more to see if I like it for different situations, but for now I am not amused.
7 votes -
Studio musicians are still waiting for credit in the streaming era
22 votes -
Musi’s free music streaming app is a hit with thrifty teens. The app claims to tap content on YouTube, but some in the music industry question the legitimacy of that model.
18 votes -
Security is being tightened for the Eurovision Song Contest in Sweden's third city Malmö, with large demonstrations planned to coincide with the event
7 votes -
Spotify lowers artist royalties despite subscription price hike
50 votes -
Hard rock band Kiss sells brand and songs for $300m
14 votes -
Johan Röhr's 2,700 songs have been streamed 15bn times – Swedish composer becomes Spotify's most-famous musician you've never heard of
8 votes